238 results on '"Bottini, G"'
Search Results
2. Patient-reported outcome and cognitive measures to be used in vascular and brain tumor surgery: proposal for a minimum set
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Schiavolin, S, Mariniello, A, Broggi, M, Abete-Fornara, G, Bollani, A, Giulio Palmas, G, Bottini, G, Querzola, M, Scarpa, P, Casarotti, A, De Michele, S, Isella, V, Mauri, I, Maietti, A, Miramonti, V, Orru, M, Pertichetti, M, Pini, E, Regazzoni, R, Subacchi, S, Ferroli, P, Leonardi, M, Schiavolin S., Mariniello A., Broggi M., Abete-Fornara G., Bollani A., Giulio Palmas G., Bottini G., Querzola M., Scarpa P., Casarotti A., De Michele S., Isella V., Mauri I., Maietti A., Miramonti V., Orru M. I., Pertichetti M., Pini E., Regazzoni R., Subacchi S., Ferroli P., Leonardi M., Schiavolin, S, Mariniello, A, Broggi, M, Abete-Fornara, G, Bollani, A, Giulio Palmas, G, Bottini, G, Querzola, M, Scarpa, P, Casarotti, A, De Michele, S, Isella, V, Mauri, I, Maietti, A, Miramonti, V, Orru, M, Pertichetti, M, Pini, E, Regazzoni, R, Subacchi, S, Ferroli, P, Leonardi, M, Schiavolin S., Mariniello A., Broggi M., Abete-Fornara G., Bollani A., Giulio Palmas G., Bottini G., Querzola M., Scarpa P., Casarotti A., De Michele S., Isella V., Mauri I., Maietti A., Miramonti V., Orru M. I., Pertichetti M., Pini E., Regazzoni R., Subacchi S., Ferroli P., and Leonardi M.
- Abstract
Background: The standardization of outcome measures is needed for comparing studies and using common measures in clinical practice. We aimed to identify cognitive and patient-reported outcomes and timing of assessment for glioma, meningioma, and vascular surgery. Method: A consensus study was conducted. Participants selected cognitive and patient-reported measures among a list of instruments identified through a literature search. Results: Seventeen cognitive tests for the glioma and meningioma’s evaluation, 8 for the vascular diseases, and one questionnaire on quality of life and one on emotional distress were identified. The timing of outcome assessment selected was before surgery, at discharge, and after 3 and 12 months for glioma; before surgery and after 3 months for meningioma; before surgery, at discharge, and after 6 months for vascular diseases. Conclusion: The identification of common outcome measures is the first step toward a shared data collection improving the quality and comparability of future studies.
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- 2022
3. Attention to body parts prompts thermoregulatory reactions in Body Integrity Dysphoria
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Salvato, G, Zapparoli, L, Gandola, M, Sacilotto, E, Ludwig, N, Gargano, M, Fazia, T, Saetta, G, Brugger, P, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, Salvato G., Zapparoli L., Gandola M., Sacilotto E., Ludwig N., Gargano M., Fazia T., Saetta G., Brugger P., Paulesu E., Bottini G., Salvato, G, Zapparoli, L, Gandola, M, Sacilotto, E, Ludwig, N, Gargano, M, Fazia, T, Saetta, G, Brugger, P, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, Salvato G., Zapparoli L., Gandola M., Sacilotto E., Ludwig N., Gargano M., Fazia T., Saetta G., Brugger P., Paulesu E., and Bottini G.
- Abstract
In healthy subjects, the transient perturbation of body part ownership is accompanied by regional skin temperature decrease. This observation leaves an open question about a possible body part-specific thermoregulatory response in pathological conditions, in which the sense of ownership over that body part is altered. For instance, Body Integrity Dysphoria (BID), a poorly understood neuropsychiatric disorder, is characterised by the non-acceptance of one or more of one's extremities. This unsettling feeling pervasively captures the individuals' attention towards the unwanted limb. Previous studies characterised BID in terms of absent ownership feeling with preserved ownership judgment. We explored for the first time whether this altered feeling is also associated with a specific thermoregulatory response. We recorded thermal image sequences of circumscribed regions of the limbs' skin in seven individuals with BID desiring to remove one leg while they were invited to focus their attention toward one particular limb (arm or leg). Their event-related thermoregulatory pattern was compared to a group of healthy matched controls. In individuals with BID but not in control persons, we found a bilateral decrease in leg temperature when focusing their attention on either the unwanted or accepted leg. The event-related thermoregulatory response for both upper limbs was similar between individuals with BID and healthy controls. Our results suggest that the alteration of the sense of body ownership in neuropsychiatric conditions such as BID may critically rest on specific event-related thermoregulatory patterns in response to modulation of attention to body parts.
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- 2022
4. Assessing mood and cognitive functioning in acute stroke: clinical usability of a Visual Analogue Mood Scale (VAMS)
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Pasotti, F, Serrano, S, Aiello, E, Gramegna, C, Querzola, M, Gallucci, M, Micieli, G, Bollani, A, Agostoni, E, Bottini, G, Pasotti F., Serrano S., Aiello E. N., Gramegna C., Querzola M., Gallucci M., Micieli G., Bollani A., Agostoni E. C., Bottini G., Pasotti, F, Serrano, S, Aiello, E, Gramegna, C, Querzola, M, Gallucci, M, Micieli, G, Bollani, A, Agostoni, E, Bottini, G, Pasotti F., Serrano S., Aiello E. N., Gramegna C., Querzola M., Gallucci M., Micieli G., Bollani A., Agostoni E. C., and Bottini G.
- Abstract
Background: Patients suffering from stroke in the acute/post-acute phases often present with depressive mood — which negatively impacts on patients’ prognosis. However, psychometric evaluation of mood in acute stroke patients may be challenging due to cognitive deficits. Tools investigating emotional states via a vertical analogue line may overcome language/visuo-spatial disorders. This study thus aimed at (a) investigating the clinical usability of a Visual Analogue Mood Scale (VAMS) in acute stroke patients and (b) investigating the interplay between mood and cognition in this population. Methods: Forty-one acute stroke patients were compared to 41 age-, education- and sex-matched healthy participants (HPs) on the VAMS and on cognitive measures (mental performance in acute stroke, MEPS). A control line bisection (LB) task was administered to control for potential visuo-spatial deficits in patients. Results: Patients reported higher depression levels than HPs (lower VAMS scores); this between-group difference stayed significant when covarying for LB scores. MEPS scores discriminated patients from HPs; among cognitive measures, only the Clock drawing test (CDT) was positively associated with VAMS scores. Lesion side did not affect patients’ mood state; however, disease duration was inversely related to VAMS scores. Discussion: The VAMS proved to be a suitable tool for assessing mood in acute stroke patients, as being independent from post-stroke cognitive sequelae. The CDT might represent an adequate measure of depression-induced, post-stroke cognitive efficiency decrease. Mood disorders might occur and thus should be adequately addressed also in post-acute phases — likely due to longer hospitalization times and regression of anosognosic features.
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- 2022
5. A multi-component, adaptive Working Memory Assessment Battery (WoMAB): validation and norms in an Italian population sample
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Pasotti, F, De Luca, G, Aiello, E, Gramegna, C, Di Gangi, M, Foderaro, G, Gallucci, M, Biglia, E, Bottini, G, Pasotti F., De Luca G., Aiello E. N., Gramegna C., Di Gangi M., Foderaro G., Gallucci M., Biglia E., Bottini G., Pasotti, F, De Luca, G, Aiello, E, Gramegna, C, Di Gangi, M, Foderaro, G, Gallucci, M, Biglia, E, Bottini, G, Pasotti F., De Luca G., Aiello E. N., Gramegna C., Di Gangi M., Foderaro G., Gallucci M., Biglia E., and Bottini G.
- Abstract
Background: Working memory (WM) abilities are frequently impaired in neurological disorders affecting fronto-parietal cortical/sub-cortical structures. WM deficits negatively influence interventional outcomes and everyday functioning. This study thus aimed at the following: (a) developing and standardizing an ecologically valid task for WM assessment (Ice Cream Test, ICT); (b) validating and norming a novel WM test (Digit Ordering Test, DOT), as well as providing updated norms for digit span (DS) tasks, in an Italian population sample; (c) introducing a novel scoring procedure for measuring WM. Methods: One-hundred and sixty-eight Italian healthy participants—73 male, 95 females; age: 48.4 ± 19.1 (18–86); education: 12.1 ± 4.8 (4–21)—underwent a thorough WM assessment—DOT, ICT, and both forward and backward DS tasks (FDS, BDS). The ICT requires participants to act as waiters who have to keep track of customers’ orders. For each task, WM and total (T) outcomes were computed, i.e., the number of elements in the longest sequence and that of recalled sequences, respectively. Norms were derived via the equivalent score (ES) method. Results: DS ratios (DSRs) were computed for both WM/S and T outcomes on raw DS measures (BDS divided by FDS). Age and education significantly predicted all WM tasks; sex affected FDS and DSR-T scores (males > females). WM measures were highly internally related. Discussion: The present work provides Italian practitioners with a normatively updated, multi-component, adaptive battery for WM assessment (WoMAB) as well as with novel outcomes which capture different WM facets—WM capacity and attentive monitoring abilities.
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- 2022
6. Skin temperature changes in response to body ownership modulation vary according to the side of stimulation
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Crivelli, D., Crotti, D., Crottini, F., Peviani, V.C., Gandola, M., Bottini, G., Salvato, G., Crivelli, D., Crotti, D., Crottini, F., Peviani, V.C., Gandola, M., Bottini, G., and Salvato, G.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, A growing body of research has shown that a unilateral alteration in the sense of limb ownership is associated with the cooling of a limb's temperature. However, the recent emergence of contradictory results calls into question the existence of a relationship between this physiological reaction and the sense of body ownership. In the light of evidence that the malleability of the sense of hand ownership differs based on the preferential motor use of the hand to which the illusion is applied, one might observe the same lateralised pattern in the skin temperature cooling. In particular, if skin temperature change is a signature of body ownership, we expected a stronger illusion and reduction in skin temperature when altering ownership alteration of the left hand compared to the right hand in dextral individuals. To test this hypothesis, we selectively perturbated body ownership of the left or right hand in 24 healthy participants in different experimental sessions using the Mirror-Box Illusion (MBI) paradigm. Participants were asked to tap synchronously or asynchronously at a constant rhythm with their left and right index fingers against two parallel mirrors while looking at their reflected right/left hand. Skin temperature was measured before and after each MBI application, and explicit judgments of ownership and proprioceptive drift were collected. The results showed a consistent cooling of the hand's temperature only when the illusion was performed on the left hand. Proprioceptive drift exhibited the same pattern. In contrast, the explicit judgment of ownership of the reflected hand was similar across the two hands. These data provide evidence in favor of a specific laterality effect of the physiological response to an induced alteration of body part ownership. Moreover, they highlight the possibility of a direct link between proprioception and skin temperature.
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- 2023
7. The nature of the task stimuli affects graphic perseveration severity: Insights from a single case study
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Gerosa, M., Peviani, V.C., Salvato, G., Pasotti, F., Crivelli, D., Bottini, G., Gerosa, M., Peviani, V.C., Salvato, G., Pasotti, F., Crivelli, D., and Bottini, G.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 298970.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access), Objective: Graphic perseveration in target-cancellation tasks has been frequently described in patients with right brain damage and unilateral spatial neglect. Conversely, among patients with dementia, the spontaneous production of complex graphic perseverations, as well as their triggers and modulating factors, have been poorly understood. Here we describe the case of RM, a patient with Alzheimer's dementia, who produced a rich pattern of complex graphic perseverations at target-cancellation tasks, especially with abstract target stimuli, i.e., lines. Method: We developed an ad-hoc behavioral paradigm to investigate patient RM's performance at two versions of a target-cancellation task: fork-cancellation and line-cancellation. In both versions, RM was asked to cross the blue targets, while crossing a red target was considered a false alarm, as a proxy of incorrect response inhibition capacity. Moreover, we classified the presence and intensity of two other graphic perseverative behaviors, i.e., additional marks and scribble perseveration. Results: Complex graphic perseverations and false alarms were more frequent in the line-compared to the fork-cancellation trials. Conversely, the semantic nature of the task did not differentially modulate the occurrence of additional marks and scribble perseverations. Conclusions: We argue that the breakdown of RM's executive functioning at the semantic-representational level was a prerequisite for such complex graphic perseverations to occur. Furthermore, we provide hints on the potential modulatory effects of stimulus concreteness on the expression of such complex productive behavior., 10 p.
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- 2023
8. The transition from a “city of waste” to a “circular city”: virtuous practices in the city of Pavia
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Re, B, Bottini, L, Ricci, C, Bottini, G, Strauss, D, Re, B, Bottini, L, Ricci, C, Bottini, G, and Strauss, D
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Cities are facing the greatest challenge of their whole lifecycle: choosing their own destiny. Cities are the main contributors to climate change, as much of the excess carbon dioxide in the atmosphere comes from them. Understanding how cities can transform into “circular cities” is key to fostering change. However, empirical studies in this direction are still scant. In this paper, we address this research gap by answering the following research question: how are current “cities of waste” transitioning to “circular cities”? We do so by means of an empirical study involving several stakeholders located in the town of Pavia (Northern Italy). We find that some actors have implemented virtuous circular economy (CE) practices; however, the transition to CE is overall conducted in a fragmented manner, with a lack of orchestration and planning among private actors as well as lack of synergies between private and public actors. We conclude our study by advancing future avenues of research, highlighting our theoretical and managerial contributions, and advancing policy implications.
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- 2023
9. Towards a common language in neurosurgical outcome evaluation: the NEON (NEurosurgical Outcome Network) proposal
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Ferroli, P, Schiavolin, S, Mariniello, A, Acerbi, F, Restelli, F, Schiariti, M, LA Corte, E, Falco, J, Levi, V, Dimeco, F, Assietti, R, Bongetta, D, Colombo, E, Bellocchi, S, Sangiorgi, S, Bistazzoni, S, Polosa, M, Orru, M, Spena, G, Bernucci, C, Sicignano, A, Fanti, A, Brembilla, C, Resmini, B, Costi, E, Cenzato, M, Talamonti, G, Bottini, G, Scarpa, P, Bollani, A, Querzola, M, Palmas, G, DE Gonda, F, Bosio, L, Egidi, M, Tardivo, V, Fioravanti, A, Subacchi, S, Fontanella, M, Biroli, A, Cereda, C, Panciani, P, Bergomi, R, Pertichetti, M, Tancioni, F, Bona, A, Tartara, F, Fornari, M, Pessina, F, Lasio, G, Cardia, A, Servadei, F, Riva, M, Casarotti, A, Giussani, C, Fiori, L, Mazzoleni, F, Vaiani, S, Carrabba, G, DI Cristofori, A, Sganzerla, E, Vimercati, A, Isella, V, Mauri, I, Incerti, M, Sicuri, G, Miramonti, V, Stefini, R, Spagnoli, D, Piparo, M, Grimod, G, Regazzoni, R, Vismara, D, Mazzeo, L, Monti, E, Franzin, A, Vivaldi, O, Maietti, A, Pini, E, Servello, D, Zekaj, E, DE Michele, S, Locatelli, M, Borsa, S, Grimoldi, N, Caroli, M, Tariciotti, L, Abete-Fornara, G, Vitale, M, Leonardi, M, Broggi, M, Ferroli, Paolo, Schiavolin, Silvia, Mariniello, Arianna, Acerbi, Francesco, Restelli, Francesco, Schiariti, Marco, LA Corte, Emanuele, Falco, Jacopo, Levi, Vincenzo, Dimeco, Francesco, Assietti, Roberto, Bongetta, Daniele, Colombo, Elena V, Bellocchi, Silvio, Sangiorgi, Simone, Bistazzoni, Simona, Polosa, Maria, Orru, Maria I, Spena, Giannantonio, Bernucci, Claudio, Sicignano, Angelo M, Fanti, Andrea, Brembilla, Carlo, Resmini, Bruno, Costi, Emanuele, Cenzato, Marco, Talamonti, Giuseppe, Bottini, Gabriella, Scarpa, Pina, Bollani, Alessandra, Querzola, Matteo, Palmas, Giulio, DE Gonda, Federico, Bosio, Lorenzo, Egidi, Marcello, Tardivo, Valentina, Fioravanti, Antonio, Subacchi, Sara, Fontanella, Marco, Biroli, Antonio, Cereda, Claudio, Panciani, Pier Paolo, Bergomi, Riccardo, Pertichetti, Marta, Tancioni, Flavio, Bona, Alberto, Tartara, Fulvio A, Fornari, Maurizio, Pessina, Federico, Lasio, Giovanni, Cardia, Andrea, Servadei, Franco, Riva, Marco, Casarotti, Alessandra, Giussani, Carlo, Fiori, Leonardo, Mazzoleni, Fabio, Vaiani, Simona, Carrabba, Giorgio, DI Cristofori, Andrea, Sganzerla, Erik P, Vimercati, Alberto, Isella, Valeria, Mauri, Ilaria, Incerti, Michele, Sicuri, Giovanni, Miramonti, Valentina, Stefini, Roberto, Spagnoli, Diego, Piparo, Maurizio, Grimod, Gianluca, Regazzoni, Rossana, Vismara, Daniela, Mazzeo, Lucio, Monti, Emanuele, Franzin, Alberto, Vivaldi, Oscar, Maietti, Alessandra, Pini, Elisa, Servello, Domenico, Zekaj, Edvin, DE Michele, Sara, Locatelli, Marco, Borsa, Stefano, Grimoldi, Nadia, Caroli, Manuela, Tariciotti, Leonardo, Abete-Fornara, Giorgia, Vitale, Mario, Leonardi, Matilde, Broggi, Morgan, Ferroli, P, Schiavolin, S, Mariniello, A, Acerbi, F, Restelli, F, Schiariti, M, LA Corte, E, Falco, J, Levi, V, Dimeco, F, Assietti, R, Bongetta, D, Colombo, E, Bellocchi, S, Sangiorgi, S, Bistazzoni, S, Polosa, M, Orru, M, Spena, G, Bernucci, C, Sicignano, A, Fanti, A, Brembilla, C, Resmini, B, Costi, E, Cenzato, M, Talamonti, G, Bottini, G, Scarpa, P, Bollani, A, Querzola, M, Palmas, G, DE Gonda, F, Bosio, L, Egidi, M, Tardivo, V, Fioravanti, A, Subacchi, S, Fontanella, M, Biroli, A, Cereda, C, Panciani, P, Bergomi, R, Pertichetti, M, Tancioni, F, Bona, A, Tartara, F, Fornari, M, Pessina, F, Lasio, G, Cardia, A, Servadei, F, Riva, M, Casarotti, A, Giussani, C, Fiori, L, Mazzoleni, F, Vaiani, S, Carrabba, G, DI Cristofori, A, Sganzerla, E, Vimercati, A, Isella, V, Mauri, I, Incerti, M, Sicuri, G, Miramonti, V, Stefini, R, Spagnoli, D, Piparo, M, Grimod, G, Regazzoni, R, Vismara, D, Mazzeo, L, Monti, E, Franzin, A, Vivaldi, O, Maietti, A, Pini, E, Servello, D, Zekaj, E, DE Michele, S, Locatelli, M, Borsa, S, Grimoldi, N, Caroli, M, Tariciotti, L, Abete-Fornara, G, Vitale, M, Leonardi, M, Broggi, M, Ferroli, Paolo, Schiavolin, Silvia, Mariniello, Arianna, Acerbi, Francesco, Restelli, Francesco, Schiariti, Marco, LA Corte, Emanuele, Falco, Jacopo, Levi, Vincenzo, Dimeco, Francesco, Assietti, Roberto, Bongetta, Daniele, Colombo, Elena V, Bellocchi, Silvio, Sangiorgi, Simone, Bistazzoni, Simona, Polosa, Maria, Orru, Maria I, Spena, Giannantonio, Bernucci, Claudio, Sicignano, Angelo M, Fanti, Andrea, Brembilla, Carlo, Resmini, Bruno, Costi, Emanuele, Cenzato, Marco, Talamonti, Giuseppe, Bottini, Gabriella, Scarpa, Pina, Bollani, Alessandra, Querzola, Matteo, Palmas, Giulio, DE Gonda, Federico, Bosio, Lorenzo, Egidi, Marcello, Tardivo, Valentina, Fioravanti, Antonio, Subacchi, Sara, Fontanella, Marco, Biroli, Antonio, Cereda, Claudio, Panciani, Pier Paolo, Bergomi, Riccardo, Pertichetti, Marta, Tancioni, Flavio, Bona, Alberto, Tartara, Fulvio A, Fornari, Maurizio, Pessina, Federico, Lasio, Giovanni, Cardia, Andrea, Servadei, Franco, Riva, Marco, Casarotti, Alessandra, Giussani, Carlo, Fiori, Leonardo, Mazzoleni, Fabio, Vaiani, Simona, Carrabba, Giorgio, DI Cristofori, Andrea, Sganzerla, Erik P, Vimercati, Alberto, Isella, Valeria, Mauri, Ilaria, Incerti, Michele, Sicuri, Giovanni, Miramonti, Valentina, Stefini, Roberto, Spagnoli, Diego, Piparo, Maurizio, Grimod, Gianluca, Regazzoni, Rossana, Vismara, Daniela, Mazzeo, Lucio, Monti, Emanuele, Franzin, Alberto, Vivaldi, Oscar, Maietti, Alessandra, Pini, Elisa, Servello, Domenico, Zekaj, Edvin, DE Michele, Sara, Locatelli, Marco, Borsa, Stefano, Grimoldi, Nadia, Caroli, Manuela, Tariciotti, Leonardo, Abete-Fornara, Giorgia, Vitale, Mario, Leonardi, Matilde, and Broggi, Morgan
- Abstract
Background: The aim of this study was to achieve a consensus on the minimum set of outcome measures and predictors to be used in the neurosurgical practice and on the timing of outcome assessment. Methods: A consensus building approach was employed. All neurosurgical departments in Lombardy (Italy) were invited to participate by the Carlo Besta Neurologic Institute IRCCS Foundation. Three workshops were organized during which a multidisciplinary group called Neurosurgical Outcome Network (NEON) was created and the methodology to select outcome measures, predictors, and timing of outcome assessment was established. Eight working groups were created for the different neurosurgical diseases (neuro-oncological, skull base, vascular, traumatic, spinal, peripheral nervous system, malformation, functional) and 8 workshops were organized to identify the outcome measures and predictors specific for each of the neurosurgical diseases based on the experts' clinical practice and the existing literature. Results: A total of 20 neurosurgical departments participated in this study. Specific outcome measures, predictors and the timing of outcome assessment were identified for each of the 8 neurosurgical diseases. Moreover, a list of variables common to all pathologies were identified by the NEON group as further data to be collected. Conclusions: A consensus on the minimum set of outcome measures and predictors and the timing of outcome assessments for 8 neurosurgical diseases was achieved by a group of neurosurgeons of the Lombardy region, called NEON. These sets could be used in future studies for a more homogeneous data collection and as a starting point to reach further agreement also at national and international level.
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- 2023
10. Brain abnormalities in individuals with a desire for a healthy limb amputation: Somatosensory, motoric or both? a task-based fmri verdict
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Gandola, M, Zapparoli, L, Saetta, G, Reverberi, C, Salvato, G, Squarza, S, Invernizzi, P, Sberna, M, Brugger, P, Bottini, G, Paulesu, E, Gandola M., Zapparoli L., Saetta G., Reverberi C., Salvato G., Squarza S. A. C., Invernizzi P., Sberna M., Brugger P., Bottini G., Paulesu E., Gandola, M, Zapparoli, L, Saetta, G, Reverberi, C, Salvato, G, Squarza, S, Invernizzi, P, Sberna, M, Brugger, P, Bottini, G, Paulesu, E, Gandola M., Zapparoli L., Saetta G., Reverberi C., Salvato G., Squarza S. A. C., Invernizzi P., Sberna M., Brugger P., Bottini G., and Paulesu E.
- Abstract
Body integrity dysphoria (BID), a long-lasting desire for the amputation of physically healthy limbs, is associated with reduced fMRI resting-state functional connectivity of somatosensory cortices. Here, we used fMRI to evaluate whether these findings could be replicated and expanded using a task-based paradigm. We measured brain activations during somatosensory stimulation and motor tasks for each of the four limbs in ten individuals with a life-long desire for the amputation of the left leg and fourteen controls. For the left leg, BID individuals had reduced brain activation in the right superior parietal lobule for somatosensory stimulation and in the right paracentral lobule for the motor task, areas where we previously found reduced resting-state functional connectivity. In addition, for somatosensory stimulation only, we found a robust reduction in activation of somatosensory areas SII bilaterally, mostly regardless of the stimulated body part. Areas SII were regions of convergent activations for signals from all four limbs in controls to a significantly greater extent than in subjects with BID. We conclude that BID is associated with altered integration of somatosensory and, to a lesser extent, motor signals, involving limb-specific cortical maps and brain regions where the first integration of body-related signals is achieved through convergence.
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- 2021
11. Clinical Characterization of Atypical Primary Progressive Aphasia in a 3-Year Longitudinal Study: A Case Report
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Basilico, S, Ciricugno, A, Gelosa, G, Magnani, F, Mosca, L, Popescu, C, Garibotto, V, Sberna, M, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, Basilico S., Ciricugno A., Gelosa G., Magnani F. G., Mosca L., Popescu C., Garibotto V., Sberna M., Paulesu E., Bottini G., Basilico, S, Ciricugno, A, Gelosa, G, Magnani, F, Mosca, L, Popescu, C, Garibotto, V, Sberna, M, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, Basilico S., Ciricugno A., Gelosa G., Magnani F. G., Mosca L., Popescu C., Garibotto V., Sberna M., Paulesu E., and Bottini G.
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The logopenic variant of primary progressive aphasia (lvPPA) is the most recent variant of primary progressive aphasia (PPA) to be identified; thus far, it has been poorly investigated. Despite being typically associated with Alzheimer disease (AD), lvPPA has recently been linked to frontotemporal lobe degeneration (FTLD), with distinctive cognitive and neural features that are worthy of further investigation. Here, we describe the neuropsychological and linguistic profile, as well as cerebral abnormalities, of an individual exhibiting PPA and carrying a pathogenetic variant in the GRN gene, from a 3-year longitudinal perspective. The individual's initial profile resembled lvPPA because it was characterized by word-finding difficulties and phonological errors in spontaneous speech in addition to sentence repetition and phonological short-term memory impairments. The individual's structural and metabolic imaging data demonstrated left temporal and bilateral frontal atrophy and hypometabolism, respectively. On follow-up, as the pathology progressed, dysprosody, stereotypical speech patterns, agrammatism, and orofacial apraxia appeared, suggesting an overlap with the nonfluent variant of PPA (nfvPPA). Severe sentence comprehension impairment also became evident. Our longitudinal and multidisciplinary diagnostic approach allowed us to better characterize the progression of a GRN-positive lvPPA profile, providing neuropsychological and imaging indicators that might be helpful to improve classification between different PPA variants and to address a nosological issue. Finally, we discuss the importance of early diagnosis of PPA given the possible overlap between different PPA variants during the progression of the pathology.
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- 2021
12. Erratum: “Neural Correlates of Body Integrity Dysphoria” (Current Biology (2020) 30(11) (2191–2195.e3), (S0960982220304814), (10.1016/j.cub.2020.04.001))
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Saetta G., Saetta, G, Hanggi, J, Gandola, M, Zapparoli, L, Salvato, G, Berlingeri, M, Sberna, M, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, Brugger, P, Saetta G., Hanggi J., Gandola M., Zapparoli L., Salvato G., Berlingeri M., Sberna M., Paulesu E., Bottini G., Brugger P., Saetta G., Saetta, G, Hanggi, J, Gandola, M, Zapparoli, L, Salvato, G, Berlingeri, M, Sberna, M, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, Brugger, P, Saetta G., Hanggi J., Gandola M., Zapparoli L., Salvato G., Berlingeri M., Sberna M., Paulesu E., Bottini G., and Brugger P.
- Abstract
(Current Biology 30, 2191–2195.e1–e3; June 8, 2020) We noticed a typo concerning a finding that we had considered to be too peripheral to be discussed in the original manuscript. In Figure 1, the acronym “lITG” (left inferior temporal gyrus) should be “lSTG” (left superior temporal gyrus). While the MNI coordinates for this region are correctly provided in Table 1 [x = −60, y = −44, z = 16], this region corresponds to the superior temporal gyrus. Also, on page 2 of the manuscript (left column, first line), “inferior temporal gyrus” should be referred to as “superior temporal gyrus.” This error has no effect on the main conclusions of the paper. The authors apologize for any confusion this may have caused.
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- 2021
13. Apotemnophilia, body integrity identity disorder or xenomelia? Psychiatric and neurologic etiologies face each other
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Sedda A and Bottini G
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Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Anna Sedda,1,2 Gabriella Bottini1,21Department of Behavioral and Brain Sciences, University of Pavia, Pavia, 2Cognitive Neuropsychology Laboratory, Niguarda Ca’ Granda Hospital, Milan, ItalyAbstract: This review summarizes the available studies of a rare condition in which individuals seek the amputation of a healthy limb or desire to be paraplegic. Since 1977, case reports and group studies have been produced, trying to understand the cause of this unusual desire. The main etiological hypotheses are presented, from the psychological/psychiatric to the most recent neurologic explanation. The paradigms adopted and the clinical features are compared across studies and analyzed in detail. Finally, future directions and ethical implications are discussed. A proposal is made to adopt a multidisciplinary approach that comprises state-of-the-art technologies and a variety of theoretical models, including both body representation and psychological and sexual components.Keywords: BIID, limb amputation, somatoparaphrenia, body representation, body ownership
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- 2014
14. Neuropsychological assessment in acute stroke patients
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Pasotti, F, Magnani, F, Gallucci, M, Salvato, G, Ovadia, D, Scotto, M, Merolla, S, Beretta, S, Micieli, G, Agostoni, E, Beretta, G, Bottini, G, Pasotti F., Magnani F. G., Gallucci M., Salvato G., Ovadia D., Scotto M., Merolla S., Beretta S., Micieli G. R., Agostoni E. C., Beretta G., Bottini G., Pasotti, F, Magnani, F, Gallucci, M, Salvato, G, Ovadia, D, Scotto, M, Merolla, S, Beretta, S, Micieli, G, Agostoni, E, Beretta, G, Bottini, G, Pasotti F., Magnani F. G., Gallucci M., Salvato G., Ovadia D., Scotto M., Merolla S., Beretta S., Micieli G. R., Agostoni E. C., Beretta G., and Bottini G.
- Abstract
Background and purpose: The number of people suffering from stroke is strongly increasing, giving rise to multiple cognitive deficits which frequently prevent a full recovery. The identification of both spared and impaired cognitive domains has a key role to plan adequate interventions. However, the existing standard tests are either too expensive in terms of time and efforts for patients in acute stage or they derived from instruments addressing different pathologies such as dementia. Methods: We developed a brief neuropsychological battery (mental performance in acute stroke, MEPS) to assess different cognitive domains (language, memory, praxis, visual perception) in acute stroke patients. MEPS was validated by enrolling a sample of 204 patients suffering from stroke in acute stage, and 263 healthy controls participants. Results: The results indicated an adequate construct validity and a high ability in discriminating patients from healthy controls. Conclusions: MEPS can be considered a simple and highly valuable bedside battery, easy to administer, with values of sensitivity and specificity suitable to be proposed as a screening tool for patients with acute stroke.
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- 2020
15. Implicit mechanisms of body image alterations: The covert attention exposure effect
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Salvato, G, Romano, D, De Maio, G, Bottini, G, Salvato G., Romano D., De Maio G., Bottini G., Salvato, G, Romano, D, De Maio, G, Bottini, G, Salvato G., Romano D., De Maio G., and Bottini G.
- Abstract
Visual exposure to extreme-sized bodies elicits explicit self-body image variations. Several features of such modulation remain to be clarified. In this study we explored whether this effect: (i) acts on implicit mechanisms in modifying one’s body-size perception, (ii) is body-exposure-specific also at the implicit level, and (iii) is modulated by interoceptive sensibility. We assigned a covert attention task to 100 women, exposing them to extreme-sized bodies (thin and fat) or extreme-sized objects (thin and fat bottles). Before and after the attentional exposure, we tested the association between the “self/others” and “thin/fat” concepts using an Implicit Association Test. We also collected a measure of interoceptive sensibility by means of a self-report questionnaire. Results showed that participants exposed to fat bodies implicitly presented a stronger association between the “self” and “thin” concepts. This association was significantly weaker in the group exposed to thin bodies. This effect was absent after exposure to thin and fat bottles. Notably, participants with a higher tolerance of negative bodily interoceptive signals were less susceptible to the malleability of body image exerted by the exposure attentional task. Our findings shed new light on the relationship between the perception of internal (e.g., visceral) and external (e.g., visual) signals in the representation of our body.
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- 2020
16. The unexplored link between aesthetic perception and creativity: A theory-driven meta-analysis of fMRI studies in the visual domain
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Sacheli, L, Tomasetig, G, Musco, M, Pizzi, S, Bottini, G, Pizzamiglio, L, Paulesu, E, Sacheli, Lucia Maria, Tomasetig, Giulia, Musco, Margherita Adelaide, Pizzi, Stefano, Bottini, Gabriella, Pizzamiglio, Luigi, Paulesu, Eraldo, Sacheli, L, Tomasetig, G, Musco, M, Pizzi, S, Bottini, G, Pizzamiglio, L, Paulesu, E, Sacheli, Lucia Maria, Tomasetig, Giulia, Musco, Margherita Adelaide, Pizzi, Stefano, Bottini, Gabriella, Pizzamiglio, Luigi, and Paulesu, Eraldo
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Creative production (related to art-making) and aesthetic appreciation (related to art-viewing) are inherently linked in visual arts, but their relationship has never been explored explicitly in cognitive neuroscience, nor the nature of such connection. The available literature suggests two cognitive processes as possible foundations of these two experiences: motor simulation or inhibitory control. In a meta-analysis of fMRI studies, we addressed this issue: we investigated whether there are shared neurofunctional underpinnings behind aesthetic and creative experiences in the visual domain; further, we examined whether any shared brain activation may reflect either motor simulation or inhibitory processes. A conjunction analysis revealed a common involvement of the pre-SMA in both classes of studies, a brain region, if anything, more concerned with top-down inhibitory motor and volitional cognitive control rather than bottom-up motor simulation. In the art-viewing domain, this finding was primarily driven by figurative rather than abstract art. The methodological limitations in the available literature are discussed together with possible new ways to expand the existing findings.
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- 2022
17. The unexplored link between art-making and art-viewing: a meta-analysis on fMRI evidence in the visual domain
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Musco, M, Tomasetig, G, Pizzamiglio, L, Pizzi, S, Bottini, G, Sacheli, L, Paulesu, E, Musco, M, Tomasetig, G, Pizzamiglio, L, Pizzi, S, Bottini, G, Sacheli, L, and Paulesu, E
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- 2022
18. Imaging the neural underpinnings of freezing of gait in Parkinson's disease
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Bardakan, M, Fink, G, Zapparoli, L, Bottini, G, Paulesu, E, Weiss, P, Bardakan, Michella M, Fink, Gereon R, Zapparoli, Laura, Bottini, Gabriella, Paulesu, Eraldo, Weiss, Peter H, Bardakan, M, Fink, G, Zapparoli, L, Bottini, G, Paulesu, E, Weiss, P, Bardakan, Michella M, Fink, Gereon R, Zapparoli, Laura, Bottini, Gabriella, Paulesu, Eraldo, and Weiss, Peter H
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Freezing of gait (FoG) is a paroxysmal and sporadic gait impairment that severely affects PD patients’ quality of life. This review summarizes current neuroimaging investigations that characterize the neural underpinnings of FoG in PD. The review presents and discusses the latest advances across multiple methodological domains that shed light on structural correlates, connectivity changes, and activation patterns associated with the different pathophysiological models of FoG in PD. Resting-state fMRI studies mainly report cortico-striatal decoupling and disruptions in connectivity along the dorsal stream of visuomotor processing, thus supporting the ‘interference’ and the ‘perceptual dysfunction’ models of FoG. Task-based MRI studies employing virtual reality and motor imagery paradigms reveal a disruption in functional connectivity between cortical and subcortical regions and an increased recruitment of parieto-occipital regions, thus corroborating the ‘interference’ and ‘perceptual dysfunction’ models of FoG. The main findings of fNIRS studies of actual gait primarily reveal increased recruitment of frontal areas during gait, supporting the ‘executive dysfunction’ model of FoG. Finally, we discuss how identifying the neural substrates of FoG may open new avenues to develop efficient treatment strategies.
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- 2022
19. Patient-reported outcome and cognitive measures to be used in vascular and brain tumor surgery: proposal for a minimum set
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Schiavolin, S., Mariniello, A., Broggi, M., Abete-Fornara, G., Bollani, A., Palmas, G., Bottini, G., Querzola, M., Scarpa, P., Casarotti, A., De Michele, S., Isella, V., Mauri, I., Maietti, A., Miramonti, V., Orru, M. I., Pertichetti, M., Pini, E., Regazzoni, R., Subacchi, S., Ferroli, P, Leonardi, M, Maietti A. (ORCID:0000-0002-9819-7037), Schiavolin, S., Mariniello, A., Broggi, M., Abete-Fornara, G., Bollani, A., Palmas, G., Bottini, G., Querzola, M., Scarpa, P., Casarotti, A., De Michele, S., Isella, V., Mauri, I., Maietti, A., Miramonti, V., Orru, M. I., Pertichetti, M., Pini, E., Regazzoni, R., Subacchi, S., Ferroli, P, Leonardi, M, and Maietti A. (ORCID:0000-0002-9819-7037)
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Background: The standardization of outcome measures is needed for comparing studies and using common measures in clinical practice. We aimed to identify cognitive and patient-reported outcomes and timing of assessment for glioma, meningioma, and vascular surgery. Method: A consensus study was conducted. Participants selected cognitive and patient-reported measures among a list of instruments identifed through a literature search. Results: Seventeen cognitive tests for the glioma and meningioma’s evaluation, 8 for the vascular diseases, and one questionnaire on quality of life and one on emotional distress were identifed. The timing of outcome assessment selected was before surgery, at discharge, and after 3 and 12 months for glioma; before surgery and after 3 months for meningioma; before surgery, at discharge, and after 6 months for vascular diseases. Conclusion: The identifcation of common outcome measures is the frst step toward a shared data collection improving the quality and comparability of future studies
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- 2022
20. White Matter Abnormalities in the Amputation Variant of Body Integrity Dysphoria
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Saetta, G, Ruddy, K, Zapparoli, L, Gandola, M, Salvato, G, Sberna, M, Bottini, G, Brugger, P, Lenggenhager, B, Saetta, Gianluca, Ruddy, Kathy, Zapparoli, Laura, Gandola, Martina, Salvato, Gerardo, Sberna, Maurizio, Bottini, Gabriella, Brugger, Peter, Lenggenhager, Bigna, Saetta, G, Ruddy, K, Zapparoli, L, Gandola, M, Salvato, G, Sberna, M, Bottini, G, Brugger, P, Lenggenhager, B, Saetta, Gianluca, Ruddy, Kathy, Zapparoli, Laura, Gandola, Martina, Salvato, Gerardo, Sberna, Maurizio, Bottini, Gabriella, Brugger, Peter, and Lenggenhager, Bigna
- Abstract
“Body integrity dysphoria” (BID) is a severe condition affecting nonpsychotic individuals. In the amputation variant of BID, a limb may be experienced as not being part of the body, despite normal anatomical development and intact sensorimotor functions. We previously demonstrated altered brain structural (gray matter) and functional connectivity in 16 men with BID with a long-lasting and exclusive desire for left leg amputation. Here, we aimed to identify, in the same sample, altered patterns of white matter structural connectivity. Fractional anisotropy (FA), derived from diffusion tensor imaging data, was considered as a measure of structural connectivity. Results showed reduced structural connectivity of: (i) the right superior parietal lobule (rSPL) with the right cuneus, with the superior occipital and with the posterior cingulate gyri, (ii) the pars orbitalis of the right middle frontal gyrus (rMFGOrb) with the putamen, and (iii) the left middle temporal gyrus (lMTG) with the pars triangularis of the left inferior frontal gyrus. Increased connectivity was found between the right paracentral lobule (rPLC) and the right caudate nucleus. By using a complementary method of investigation, we confirmed and extended previous results from the same sample of individuals with BID, showing structural alterations between areas tuned to the processing of the sensorimotor representations of the affected leg (rPCL), and to higher-order components of bodily representation such as the body image (rSPL) and visual processing. Alongside this network for bodily awareness, other networks such as the limbic (rMFGOrb) and the mirror (lMTG) systems showed alterations in structural connectivity. These findings consolidate current understanding of the neural correlates of the amputation variant of BID, which might in turn guide diagnostics and rehabilitative treatments.
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- 2022
21. Management of psychogenic non-epileptic seizures: a multidisciplinary approach
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Gasparini, S, Beghi, E, Ferlazzo, E, Beghi, M, Belcastro, V, Biermann, K, Bottini, G, Capovilla, G, Cervellione, R, Cianci, V, Coppola, G, Cornaggia, C, De Fazio, P, De Masi, S, De Sarro, G, Elia, M, Erba, G, Fusco, L, Gambardella, A, Gentile, V, Giallonardo, A, Guerrini, R, Ingravallo, F, Iudice, A, Labate, A, Lucenteforte, E, Magaudda, A, Mumoli, L, Papagno, C, Pesce, G, Pucci, E, Ricci, P, Romeo, A, Quintas, R, Sueri, C, Vitaliti, G, Zoia, R, Aguglia, U, Gasparini S., Beghi E., Ferlazzo E., Beghi M., Belcastro V., Biermann K. P., Bottini G., Capovilla G., Cervellione R. A., Cianci V., Coppola G., Cornaggia C. M., De Fazio P., De Masi S., De Sarro G., Elia M., Erba G., Fusco L., Gambardella A., Gentile V., Giallonardo A. T., Guerrini R., Ingravallo F., Iudice A., Labate A., Lucenteforte E., Magaudda A., Mumoli L., Papagno C., Pesce G. B., Pucci E., Ricci P., Romeo A., Quintas R., Sueri C., Vitaliti G., Zoia R., Aguglia U., Gasparini, S, Beghi, E, Ferlazzo, E, Beghi, M, Belcastro, V, Biermann, K, Bottini, G, Capovilla, G, Cervellione, R, Cianci, V, Coppola, G, Cornaggia, C, De Fazio, P, De Masi, S, De Sarro, G, Elia, M, Erba, G, Fusco, L, Gambardella, A, Gentile, V, Giallonardo, A, Guerrini, R, Ingravallo, F, Iudice, A, Labate, A, Lucenteforte, E, Magaudda, A, Mumoli, L, Papagno, C, Pesce, G, Pucci, E, Ricci, P, Romeo, A, Quintas, R, Sueri, C, Vitaliti, G, Zoia, R, Aguglia, U, Gasparini S., Beghi E., Ferlazzo E., Beghi M., Belcastro V., Biermann K. P., Bottini G., Capovilla G., Cervellione R. A., Cianci V., Coppola G., Cornaggia C. M., De Fazio P., De Masi S., De Sarro G., Elia M., Erba G., Fusco L., Gambardella A., Gentile V., Giallonardo A. T., Guerrini R., Ingravallo F., Iudice A., Labate A., Lucenteforte E., Magaudda A., Mumoli L., Papagno C., Pesce G. B., Pucci E., Ricci P., Romeo A., Quintas R., Sueri C., Vitaliti G., Zoia R., and Aguglia U.
- Abstract
The International League against Epilepsy (ILAE) proposed a diagnostic scheme for psychogenic non-epileptic seizure (PNES). The debate on ethical aspects of the diagnostic procedures is ongoing, the treatment is not standardized and management might differ according to age group. The objective was to reach an expert and stakeholder consensus on PNES management. A board comprising adult and child neurologists, neuropsychologists, psychiatrists, pharmacologists, experts in forensic medicine and bioethics as well as patients’ representatives was formed. The board chose five main topics regarding PNES: diagnosis; ethical issues; psychiatric comorbidities; psychological treatment; and pharmacological treatment. After a systematic review of the literature, the board met in a consensus conference in Catanzaro (Italy). Further consultations using a model of Delphi panel were held. The global level of evidence for all topics was low. Even though most questions were formulated separately for children/adolescents and adults, no major age-related differences emerged. The board established that the approach to PNES diagnosis should comply with ILAE recommendations. Seizure induction was considered ethical, preferring the least invasive techniques. The board recommended looking carefully for mood disturbances, personality disorders and psychic trauma in persons with PNES and considering cognitive-behavioural therapy as a first-line psychological approach and pharmacological treatment to manage comorbid conditions, namely anxiety and depression. Psychogenic non-epileptic seizure management should be multidisciplinary. High-quality long-term studies are needed to standardize PNES management.
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- 2019
22. Cognitive and behavioral manifestations in SARS-CoV-2 infection: not specific or distinctive features?
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Stracciari, A., Bottini, Gabriella, Guarino, Mariateresa, Magni, Eugenio, Pantoni, L., Bottini G., Guarino M., Magni E. (ORCID:0000-0002-2235-2280), Stracciari, A., Bottini, Gabriella, Guarino, Mariateresa, Magni, Eugenio, Pantoni, L., Bottini G., Guarino M., and Magni E. (ORCID:0000-0002-2235-2280)
- Abstract
Patients with COVID-19 are increasingly reported to suffer from a wide range of neurological complications, affecting both the central and peripheral nervous system. Among central manifestations, cognitive and behavioral symptoms are to date not exhaustively detailed. Furthermore, it is not clear whether these represent a combination of non-specific complications of a severe systemic disease, not differing from those usually seen in patients suffering from heterogenous pathological conditions affecting the central nervous system, or instead, they are a peculiar expression of COVID-19 neurotropism; in other words, if the infection has a coincidental or causal role in such patients. We examined both hypotheses, reporting opposite points of view, with the aim to stimulate discussion and raise awareness of the topic.
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- 2021
23. Investigating visuo-spatial neglect and visual extinction during intracranial electrical stimulations: the role of the right inferior parietal cortex
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Salvato, G, Peviani, V, Scarpa, P, Francione, S, Castana, L, Gallace, A, Bricolo, E, Vallar, G, Bottini, G, Salvato, Gerardo, Peviani, Valeria, Scarpa, Pina, Francione, Stefano, Castana, Laura, Gallace, Alberto, Bricolo, Emanuela, Vallar, Giuseppe, Bottini, Gabriella, Salvato, G, Peviani, V, Scarpa, P, Francione, S, Castana, L, Gallace, A, Bricolo, E, Vallar, G, Bottini, G, Salvato, Gerardo, Peviani, Valeria, Scarpa, Pina, Francione, Stefano, Castana, Laura, Gallace, Alberto, Bricolo, Emanuela, Vallar, Giuseppe, and Bottini, Gabriella
- Abstract
Both visuo-spatial neglect and visual extinction may occur following right-brain damage. So far, studies on brain-damaged patients have not provided definite evidence about which lesion patterns may lead to the association or dissociation of these deficits. This study was set out to address this issue using Intracranial Electrical Stimulation (IES) in a group of nine patients affected by refractory epilepsy. Cerebral regions associated with visuo-spatial neglect and visual extinction were stimulated, including the right frontal, temporal, and posterior parietal areas. During IES, patients with intracranial implantation involving at least one of these cortical regions were administered with a manual line bisection task (N = 9) to assess visuo-spatial neglect, and a computerized task (N = 8) assessing visual extinction. Results showed that parietal IES induced a rightward bias at the manual bisection task, together with a general improvement in reaction times at bilateral and unilateral visual stimuli detection at the extinction task. The occurrence of visual extinction did not vary across stimulations. By adopting a complementary approach to anatomo-clinical correlation studies, our work corroborates the notion that lesions to the right inferior parietal lobule play a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of visuo-spatial neglect. Importantly, our results also suggest that temporarily interfering with the activity of this region is not sufficient per se to generate visual extinction, which instead may involve a broader and/or different network, possibly extending beyond the cerebral regions considered here, posing important theoretical and clinical implications.
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- 2021
24. Effects of Orthographic Consistency on Bilingual Reading: Human and Computer Simulation Data
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Paulesu, E, Bonandrini, R, Zapparoli, L, Rupani, C, Mapelli, C, Tassini, F, Schenone, P, Bottini, G, Perry, C, Zorzi, M, Paulesu, Eraldo, Bonandrini, Rolando, Zapparoli, Laura, Rupani, Cristina, Mapelli, Cristina, Tassini, Fulvia, Schenone, Pietro, Bottini, Gabriella, Perry, Conrad, Zorzi, Marco, Paulesu, E, Bonandrini, R, Zapparoli, L, Rupani, C, Mapelli, C, Tassini, F, Schenone, P, Bottini, G, Perry, C, Zorzi, M, Paulesu, Eraldo, Bonandrini, Rolando, Zapparoli, Laura, Rupani, Cristina, Mapelli, Cristina, Tassini, Fulvia, Schenone, Pietro, Bottini, Gabriella, Perry, Conrad, and Zorzi, Marco
- Abstract
English serves as today's lingua franca, a role not eased by the inconsistency of its orthography. Indeed, monolingual readers of more consistent orthographies such as Italian or German learn to read more quickly than monolingual English readers. Here, we assessed whether long-lasting bilingualism would mitigate orthography-specific differences in reading speed and whether the order in which orthographies with a different regularity are learned matters. We studied high-proficiency Italian-English and English-Italian bilinguals, with at least 20 years of intensive daily exposure to the second language and its orthography and we simulated sequential learning of the two orthographies with the CDP++ connectionist model of reading. We found that group differences in reading speed were comparatively bigger with Italian stimuli than with English stimuli. Furthermore, only Italian bilinguals took advantage of a blocked presentation of Italian stimuli compared to when stimuli from both languages were presented in mixed order, suggesting a greater ability to keep language-specific orthographic representations segregated. These findings demonstrate orthographic constraints on bilingual reading, whereby the level of consistency of the first learned orthography affects later learning and performance on a second orthography. The computer simulations were consistent with these conclusions.
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- 2021
25. “The vestibular system, body temperature and sense of body ownership: a potential link? Insights from a single case study”
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Salvato, G, Gandola, M, Veronelli, L, Berlingeri, M, Corbo, M, Bottini, G, Salvato G., Gandola M., Veronelli L., Berlingeri M., Corbo M., Bottini G., Salvato, G, Gandola, M, Veronelli, L, Berlingeri, M, Corbo, M, Bottini, G, Salvato G., Gandola M., Veronelli L., Berlingeri M., Corbo M., and Bottini G.
- Abstract
The vestibular system plays a pivotal role in behavioural and physiological aspects of body representation. If on the one hand, the stimulation of the vestibular system in healthy subjects provokes body representation distortions, accompanied by a decrease of body temperature, on the other hand, in brain-damaged patients it transiently restores body representation disorders. So far, the physiological counterpart of such behavioural amelioration on patients has never been explored. Here we aimed at investigating body temperature variations following Caloric Vestibular Stimulation (CVS), in a patient affected by somatoparaphrenia who regained the sense of body part ownership after the stimulation. Results showed an increase in body temperature after CVS, which also correlated with the temporary restored sense of limb ownership. Our results support the idea that physiological signals are fundamental to maintain a coherent mental representation of the body.
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- 2018
26. A very light lunch: Interoceptive deficits and food aversion at onset in a case of behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia
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Salvato, G, Mercurio, M, Sberna, M, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, Salvato G., Mercurio M., Sberna M., Paulesu E., Bottini G., Salvato, G, Mercurio, M, Sberna, M, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, Salvato G., Mercurio M., Sberna M., Paulesu E., and Bottini G.
- Abstract
Introduction: Patients affected by the behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) frequently experience, at a delayed onset, abnormal eating behavior involving increased food intake. Although delusional food-related symptoms have attracted much attention, the behavioral and neural features of food aversion manifestations in bvFTD remain poorly documented. Methods: We describe the rare case of a patient with bvFTD presenting with lack of interoception for swallowing and digestion, coupled with a dramatic food aversion at onset. We also compared his MRI scan to 84 healthy individuals using a voxel-based morphometry approach. Results: We found gray matter density reductions involving the postcentral gyrus bilaterally, insulae, and right medial orbitofrontal cortex. Discussion: Our results shed new light on the behavioral and neuroanatomical features of food aversion and interoception deficits in bvFTD, suggesting that besides orbitofrontal cortex, also a distributed system associated with interoception might play a role in such behavioral manifestation.
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- 2018
27. Neural Correlates of Body Integrity Dysphoria
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Saetta, G, Hänggi, J, Gandola, M, Zapparoli, L, Salvato, G, Berlingeri, M, Sberna, M, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, Brugger, P, Saetta, Gianluca, Hänggi, Jürgen, Gandola, Martina, Zapparoli, Laura, Salvato, Gerardo, Berlingeri, Manuela, Sberna, Maurizio, Paulesu, Eraldo, Bottini, Gabriella, Brugger, Peter, Saetta, G, Hänggi, J, Gandola, M, Zapparoli, L, Salvato, G, Berlingeri, M, Sberna, M, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, Brugger, P, Saetta, Gianluca, Hänggi, Jürgen, Gandola, Martina, Zapparoli, Laura, Salvato, Gerardo, Berlingeri, Manuela, Sberna, Maurizio, Paulesu, Eraldo, Bottini, Gabriella, and Brugger, Peter
- Abstract
There are few things as irrefutable as the evidence that our limbs belong to us. However, persons with body integrity dysphoria (BID) [1] deny the ownership of one of their fully functional limbs and seek its amputation [2]. We tapped into the brain mechanisms of BID, examining sixteen men desiring the removal of the left healthy leg. The primary sensorimotor area of the to-be-removed leg and the core area of the conscious representation of body size and shape (the right superior parietal lobule [rSPL]) [3, 4] were less functionally connected to the rest of the brain. Furthermore, the left premotor cortex, reportedly involved in the multisensory integration of limb information [5-7], and the rSPL were atrophic. The more atrophic the rSPL, the stronger the desire for amputation, and the more an individual pretended to be an amputee by using wheelchairs or crutches to solve the mismatch between the desired and actual body. Our findings illustrate the pivotal role of the connectivity of the primary sensorimotor limb area in the mediation of the feeling of body ownership. They also delineate the morphometric and functional alterations in areas of higher-order body representation possibly responsible for the dissatisfaction with a standard body configuration. The neural correlates of BID may foster the understanding of other neuropsychiatric disorders involving the bodily self. Ultimately, they may help us understand what most of us take for granted, i.e., the experience of body and self as a seamless unity.
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- 2020
28. Pathological risk-propensity typifies Mafia members’ cognitive profile
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Salvato, G, Fiorina, M, De Maio, G, Francescon, E, Ovadia, D, Bernardinelli, L, Santosuosso, A, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, Fiorina, ML, Salvato, G, Fiorina, M, De Maio, G, Francescon, E, Ovadia, D, Bernardinelli, L, Santosuosso, A, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, and Fiorina, ML
- Abstract
Since the recruitment process, Italian Mafias impose on their members a strict code of conduct. These rigid rules regulate their private and public behavior, implying a total adhesion to the group’s values. Such juridical and social aspects substantially distinguish organized crime (OC) from ordinary crime. It is still unknown whether these two categories of offenders also show distinctive cognitive traits. Here we investigated the frontal lobe cognitive functions of 50 OC prisoners from the Mafia and 50 non-OC prisoners based on the performance of 50 non-prisoner controls. We found that OC members were more likely to show pathological risk-propensity than non-OC prisoners. We interpret this finding as the result of the internal dynamics of Mafia groups. OC is a worldwide threat, and the identification of cognitive traits behind criminal behavior will help in devising focused prevention policies.
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- 2020
29. Autonomic responses to emotional linguistic stimuli and amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations predict outcome after severe brain injury
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Salvato, G, Berlingeri, M, De Maio, G, Curto, F, Chieregato, A, Magnani, F, Sberna, M, Rosanova, M, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, Magnani, FG, Salvato, G, Berlingeri, M, De Maio, G, Curto, F, Chieregato, A, Magnani, F, Sberna, M, Rosanova, M, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, and Magnani, FG
- Abstract
An accurate prognosis on the outcome of brain-injured patients with disorders of consciousness (DOC) remains a significant challenge, especially in the acute stage. In this study, we applied a multiple-technique approach to provide accurate predictions on functional outcome after 6 months in 15 acute DOC patients. Electrophysiological correlates of implicit cognitive processing of verbal stimuli and data-driven voxel-wise resting-state fMRI signals, such as the fractional amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations (fALFF), were employed. Event-related electrodermal activity, an index of autonomic activation, was recorded in response to emotional words and pseudo-words at baseline (T0). On the same day, patients also underwent a resting-state fMRI scan. Six months later (T1), patients were classified as outcome-negative and outcome-positive using a standard functional outcome scale. We then revisited the baseline measures to test their predictive power for the functional outcome measured at T1. We found that only outcome-positive patients had an earlier, higher autonomic response for words compared to pseudo-words, a pattern similar to that of healthy awake controls. Furthermore, DOC patients showed reduced fALFF in the posterior cingulate cortex (PCC), a brain region that contributes to autonomic regulation and awareness. The event-related electrodermal marker of residual cognitive functioning was found to have a significant correlation with residual local neuronal activity in the PCC. We propose that a residual autonomic response to cognitively salient stimuli, together with a preserved resting-state activity in the PCC, can provide a useful prognostic index in acute DOC.
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- 2020
30. Building the bodily self-awareness: Evidence for the convergence between interoceptive and exteroceptive information in a multilevel kernel density analysis study
- Author
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Salvato, G, Richter, F, Sedeño, L, Bottini, G, Paulesu, E, Salvato, G, Richter, F, Sedeño, L, Bottini, G, and Paulesu, E
- Abstract
Exteroceptive and interoceptive signals shape and sustain the bodily self-awareness. The existence of a set of brain areas, supporting the integration of information coming from the inside and the outside of the body in building the sense of bodily self-awareness has been postulated, yet the evidence remains limited, a matter of discussion never assessed quantitatively. With the aim of unrevealing where in the brain interoceptive and exteroceptive signals may converge, we performed a meta-analysis on imaging studies of the sense of body ownership, modulated by external visuotactile stimulation, and studies on interoception, which involves the self-awareness for internal bodily sensations. Using a multilevel kernel density analysis, we found that processing of stimuli of the two domains converges primarily in the supramarginal gyrus bilaterally. Furthermore, we found a right-lateralized set of areas, including the precentral and postcentral, and superior temporal gyri. We discuss these results and propose this set of areas as ideal candidates to match multiple body-related signals contributing to the creation of a multidimensional representation of the bodily self.
- Published
- 2020
31. Shared cortical anatomy for motor awareness and motor control
- Author
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Berti, A., Bottini, G., Gandola, M., Pia, L., Smania, N., Stracciari, A., Castiglioni, I., Vallar, G., and Paulesu, E.
- Subjects
Brain damage -- Physiological aspects -- Psychological aspects -- Research ,Motor ability -- Research -- Physiological aspects -- Psychological aspects -- Analysis ,Movement disorders -- Analysis -- Physiological aspects -- Research ,Human mechanics -- Research -- Psychological aspects -- Analysis -- Physiological aspects ,Hemiplegia -- Analysis -- Research ,Science and technology - Abstract
In everyday life, the successful monitoring of behavior requires continuous updating of the effectiveness of motor acts; one crucial step is becoming aware of the movements one is performing. We studied the anatomical distribution of Lesions in right-brain--damaged hemiplegic patients, who obstinately denied their motor impairment, claiming that they could move their paralyzed limbs. Denial was associated with lesions in areas related to the programming of motor acts, particularly Brodmann's premotor areas 6 and 44, motor area 4, and the somatosensory cortex. This association suggests that monitoring systems may be implemented within the same cortical network that is responsible for the primary function that has to be monitored., Although much of the functioning of the body's motor systems occurs without awareness, humans are aware that they are moving (or not moving) different parts of their body, even when [...]
- Published
- 2005
32. Modulation of conscious experience by peripheral sensory stimuli
- Author
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Bottini, G., Paulesu, E., Sterzi, R., Warburton, E., Wise, R.J.S., Vallar, G., Frackowiak, R.S.J., and Frith, C.D.
- Subjects
Sensory stimulation -- Physiological aspects ,Brain research -- Observations ,Brain damage -- Physiological aspects ,Environmental issues ,Science and technology ,Zoology and wildlife conservation - Abstract
Research with brain damaged humans provides evidence that conscious tactile perception is generated not through a specific sensory section of the brain but rather through multiple sensory representations from the primary somatosensory cortex. Recovery of conscious awareness of touch after cerebral damage especially after the vestibular system has been stimulated provides support for shared perceptions of signals because the body is able to redistribute the neural system to compensate for damaged areas.
- Published
- 1995
33. The Italian dementia with Lewy bodies study group (DLB-SINdem): toward a standardization of clinical procedures and multicenter cohort studies design
- Author
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Bonanni, L, Cagnin, A., Agosta, F., Babiloni, C., Borroni, B., Bozzali, M., Bruni, A. C., Filippi, M., Galimberti, D., Monastero, R., Muscio, C., Parnetti, L., Perani, D., Serra, L., Silani, V., Tiraboschi, P., Padovani, A., On behalf of DLB SINdem study group, Null, Alberici, A., Alberoni, M., Amici, S., Appollonio, I., Arena, M. G., Arighi, A., Avanzi, S., Bagella, C. F., Baglio, F., Barocco, F., Belardinelli, N., Bonuccelli, U., Bottini, G., Bruno Bossio, R., Bruno, G., Buccomino, D., Cacchiò, G., Calabrese, E., Campanelli, A., Canevelli, M., Canu, E. D. G., Cappa, A., Capra, C., Carapelle, E., Caratozzolo, S., Carbone, G. F. S., Cattaruzza, T., Cerami, C., Cester, A., Cheldi, A., Cherchi, R., Chiari, A., Cirafisi, C., Colao, R., Confaloni, A., Conti, M. Z., Costa, A., Costa, B., Cotelli, M. S., Cova, I., Cravello, L., Cumbo, E., Cupidi, C., De Togni, L., Del Din, G., Del Re, M. L., Dentizzi, C., Di Lorenzo, F., Di Stefano, F., Dikova, N., Farina, E., Floris, G., Foti, A., Franceschi, M., Fumagalli, G. G., Gabelli, C., Ghidoni, E., Giannandrea, D., Giordana, M. T., Giorelli, M., Giubilei, F., Grimaldi, L., Grimaldi, R., Guglielmi, V., Lanari, A., Le Pira, F., Letteri, F., Levi Minzi, G. V., Lorusso, S., Ludovico, L., Luzzi, S., Maggiore, L., Magnani, G., Mancini, G., Manconi, F. M., Manfredi, L., Maniscalco, M., Marano, P., Marcon, M., Marcone, A., Marra, C., Martorana, A., Mascia, M. G., Mascia, V., Mauri, M., Mazzei, B., Meloni, M., Merlo, P., Messa, G., Milia, A., Monacelli, F., Montecalvo, G., Moschella, V., Mura, G., Nemni, R., Nobili, F., Notarelli, A., Di Giacomo, R., Onofrj, M., Paci, C., Padiglioni, C., Perini, M., Perotta, D., Perri, Formenti A., Perri, R., Piccininni, C., Piccoli, T., Pilia, G., Pilotto, A., Poli, S., Pomati, S., Pompanin, S., Pucci, E., Puccio, G., Quaranta, D., Rainero, I., Rea, G., Realmuto, S., Riva, M., Rizzetti, M. C., Rolma, G., Rozzini, L., Sacco, L., Saibene, F. L., Scarpini, E., Sensi, S., Seripa, D., Sinforiani, E., Sorbi, S., Sorrentino, Giuseppe, Spallazzi, M., Stracciari, A., Talarico, G., Tassinari, T., Thomas, A., Tiezzi, A., Tomassini, P. F., Trebbastoni, A., Tremolizzo, L., Tripi, G., Ursini, F., Vaianella, L., Valluzzi, F., Vezzadini, G., Vista, M., Volontè, M. A., Bonanni, L, Cagnin, A, Agosta, F, Babiloni, C, Borroni, B, Bozzali, M, Bruni, A, Filippi, M, Galimberti, D, Monastero, R, Muscio, C, Parnetti, L, Perani, D, Serra, L, Silani, V, Tiraboschi, P, Padovani, A, Alberici, A, Alberoni, M, Amici, S, Appollonio, I, Arena, M, Arighi, A, Avanzi, S, Bagella, C, Baglio, F, Barocco, F, Belardinelli, N, Bonuccelli, U, Bottini, G, Bruno Bossio, R, Bruno, G, Buccomino, D, Cacchiò, G, Calabrese, E, Campanelli, A, Canevelli, M, Canu, E, Cappa, A, Capra, C, Carapelle, E, Caratozzolo, S, Carbone, G, Cattaruzza, T, Cerami, C, Cester, A, Cheldi, A, Cherchi, R, Chiari, A, Cirafisi, C, Colao, R, Confaloni, A, Conti, M, Costa, A, Costa, B, Cotelli, M, Cova, I, Cravello, L, Cumbo, E, Cupidi, C, de Togni, L, Del Din, G, Del Re, M, Dentizzi, C, Di Lorenzo, F, Di Stefano, F, Dikova, N, Farina, E, Floris, G, Foti, A, Franceschi, M, Fumagalli, G, Gabelli, C, Ghidoni, E, Giannandrea, D, Giordana, M, Giorelli, M, Giubilei, F, Grimaldi, L, Grimaldi, R, Guglielmi, V, Lanari, A, Le Pira, F, Letteri, F, Levi Minzi, G, Lorusso, S, Ludovico, L, Luzzi, S, Maggiore, L, Magnani, G, Mancini, G, Manconi, F, Manfredi, L, Maniscalco, M, Marano, P, Marcon, M, Marcone, A, Marra, C, Martorana, A, Mascia, M, Mascia, V, Mauri, M, Mazzei, B, Meloni, M, Merlo, P, Messa, G, Milia, A, Monacelli, F, Montecalvo, G, Moschella, V, Mura, G, Nemni, R, Nobili, F, Notarelli, A, Di Giacomo, R, Onofrj, M, Paci, C, Padiglioni, C, Perini, M, Perotta, D, Perri, F, Perri, R, Piccininni, C, Piccoli, T, Pilia, G, Pilotto, A, Poli, S, Pomati, S, Pompanin, S, Pucci, E, Puccio, G, Quaranta, D, Rainero, I, Rea, G, Realmuto, S, Riva, M, Rizzetti, M, Rolma, G, Rozzini, L, Sacco, L, Saibene, F, Scarpini, E, Sensi, S, Seripa, D, Sinforiani, E, Sorbi, S, Sorrentino, G, Spallazzi, M, Stracciari, A, Talarico, G, Tassinari, T, Thomas, A, Tiezzi, A, Tomassini, P, Trebbastoni, A, Tremolizzo, L, Tripi, G, Ursini, F, Vaianella, L, Valluzzi, F, Vezzadini, G, Vista, M, Volontè, M, Bruni, Ac, DLB-SINdem study, Group, Bruni, AC, and Padovani, A - On behalf of DLB-SINdem study group
- Subjects
Lewy Body Disease ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Dementia with Lewy bodie ,Dementia with Lewy bodies ,Dermatology ,Cohort Studies ,Diagnosis, Differential ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Alzheimer Disease ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,mental disorders ,Standardization of diagnostic procedures ,Diagnosis ,Survey ,Disease Management ,Humans ,Italy ,Research Design ,2708 ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychiatry and Mental Health ,medicine ,Dementia ,030212 general & internal medicine ,MED/01 - STATISTICA MEDICA ,MED/26 - NEUROLOGIA ,business.industry ,Standardization of diagnostic procedure ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Settore MED/26 - NEUROLOGIA ,Cohort ,Differential ,Physical therapy ,Delirium ,Alzheimer's disease ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Frontotemporal dementia ,Cohort study - Abstract
Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) causes elevated outlays for the National Health Systems due to high institutionalization rate and patients' reduced quality of life and high mortality. Furthermore, DLB is often misdiagnosed as Alzheimer's disease. These data motivate harmonized multicenter longitudinal cohort studies to improve clinical management and therapy monitoring. The Italian DLB study group of the Italian Neurological Society for dementia (SINdem) developed and emailed a semi-structured questionnaire to 572 national dementia centers (from primary to tertiary) to prepare an Italian large longitudinal cohort. The questionnaire surveyed: (1) prevalence and incidence of DLB; (2) clinical assessment; (3) relevance and availability of diagnostic tools; (4) pharmacological management of cognitive, motor, and behavioural disturbances; (5) causes of hospitalization, with specific focus on delirium and its treatment. Overall, 135 centers (23.6 %) contributed to the survey. Overall, 5624 patients with DLB are currently followed by the 135 centers in a year (2042 of them are new patients). The percentage of DLB patients was lower (27 ± 8 %) than that of Alzheimer's disease and frontotemporal dementia (56 ± 27 %) patients. The majority of the centers (91 %) considered the clinical and neuropsychological assessments as the most relevant procedure for a DLB diagnosis. Nonetheless, most of the centers has availability of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI; 95 %), electroencephalography (EEG; 93 %), and FP-CIT single photon emission-computerized tomography (SPECT; 75 %) scan for clinical applications. It will be, therefore, possible to recruit a large harmonized Italian cohort of DLB patients for future cross-sectional and longitudinal multicenter studies.
- Published
- 2017
34. Cerebral representations for egocentric space: Functional–anatomical evidence from caloric vestibular stimulation and neck vibration
- Author
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Bottini, G., Karnath, H.-O., Vallar, G., Sterzi, R., Frith, C. D., Frackowiak, R. S. J., and Paulesu, E.
- Published
- 2001
35. The spatial side of somatoparaphrenia: a case study
- Author
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Salvato, G, Gandola, M, Veronelli, L, Agostoni, E, Sberna, M, Corbo, M, Bottini, G, Salvato G., Gandola M., Veronelli L., Agostoni E. C., Sberna M., Corbo M., Bottini G., Salvato, G, Gandola, M, Veronelli, L, Agostoni, E, Sberna, M, Corbo, M, Bottini, G, Salvato G., Gandola M., Veronelli L., Agostoni E. C., Sberna M., Corbo M., and Bottini G.
- Abstract
The perception of the bodily self in space is a composite cognitive function requiring a dynamic integrated brain mechanism. Somatoparaphrenia (SP), a delusional belief concerning the experienced disownership for the contralesional paralyzed arm, represents the disruption of such mechanism. In two experiments, we have investigated the alteration of limb disownership after spatial manipulations in a right-brain-damaged patient affected by chronic SP. In experiment 1 the patient’s spatial attention was switched between the left and right sides of space. SP signs worsened when the patient was interviewed from the left compared to the right bedside. In the second experiment we showed the first systematic transient remission of SP using left caloric vestibular stimulation (CVS), a physiologic manipulation mainly acting on the spatial frame of reference. Taken together, these results shed further light on the spatial nuance of SP and on the importance of vestibular signals for the generation of a coherent body representation. Furthermore, our case study demonstrated the possibility of eliciting more severe SP signs if the patient is interviewed from the left bedside. Additionally, CVS applications may have an important impact on the rehabilitation of these symptoms.
- Published
- 2016
36. Body ownership: When feeling and knowing diverge
- Author
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Romano, D, Sedda, A, Brugger, P, Bottini, G, ROMANO, DANIELE LUIGI, Bottini, G., Romano, D, Sedda, A, Brugger, P, Bottini, G, ROMANO, DANIELE LUIGI, and Bottini, G.
- Abstract
Individuals with the peculiar disturbance of '. overcompleteness' experience an intense desire to amputate one of their healthy limbs, describing a sense of disownership for it (Body Integrity Identity Disorder - BIID). This condition is similar to somatoparaphrenia, the acquired delusion that one's own limb belongs to someone else. In ten individuals with BIID, we measured skin conductance response to noxious stimuli, delivered to the accepted and non-accepted limb, touching the body part or simulating the contact (stimuli approach the body without contacting it), hypothesizing that these individuals have responses like somatoparaphrenic patients, who previously showed reduced pain anticipation, when the threat was directed to the disowned limb. We found reduced anticipatory response to stimuli approaching, but not contacting, the unwanted limb. Conversely, stimuli contacting the non-accepted body-part, induced stronger SCR than those contacting the healthy parts, suggesting that feeling of ownership is critically related to a proper processing of incoming threats.
- Published
- 2015
37. Controlling the alien hand through the mirror box. A single case study of Alien Hand Syndrome
- Author
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Romano, D, Sedda, A, Dell’Aquila, R, Dalla Costa, D, Beretta, G, Maravita, A, Bottini, G, ROMANO, DANIELE LUIGI, MARAVITA, ANGELO, Bottini, G., Romano, D, Sedda, A, Dell’Aquila, R, Dalla Costa, D, Beretta, G, Maravita, A, Bottini, G, ROMANO, DANIELE LUIGI, MARAVITA, ANGELO, and Bottini, G.
- Abstract
Disruption of motor control in the alien hand syndrome might result from a dissociation between intentions and sensory information. We hypothesized that voluntary motor control in this condition could improve by restoring the congruency between motor intentions and visual feedback. The present study shows that, in one patient with right alien hand syndrome, the use of a mirror box paradigm improved motor speed. We speculate that the visual feedback provided by the mirror increases the sense of congruence between intention and sensory feedback, leading to motor improvement.
- Published
- 2014
38. How many deficits in the same dyslexic brains? A behavioural and fMRI assessment of comorbidity in adult dyslexics
- Author
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Danelli, L, Berlingeri, M, Bottini, G, Borghese, N, Lucchese, M, Sberna, M, Price, C, Paulesu, E, Borghese, Na, Price, Cj, Paulesu, E., Danelli, L, Berlingeri, M, Bottini, G, Borghese, N, Lucchese, M, Sberna, M, Price, C, Paulesu, E, Borghese, Na, Price, Cj, and Paulesu, E.
- Abstract
Dyslexia can have different manifestations: this has motivated different theories on its nature, on its underlying brain bases and enduring controversies on how to best treat it. The relative weight of the different manifestations has never been evaluated using both behavioural and fMRI measures, a challenge taken here to assess the major systems called into play in dyslexia by different theories. We found that adult well-compensated dyslexics were systematically impaired only in reading and in visuo-phonological tasks, while deficits for other systems (e.g., motor/cerebellar, visual magnocellular/motion perception) were only very occasional. In line with these findings, fMRI showed a reliable hypoactivation only for the task of reading, in the left occipito-temporal cortex (l-OTC). The l-OTC, normally a crossroad between the reading system and other systems, did not show the same level of intersection in dyslexics; yet, it was not totally silent because it responded, in segregated parts, during auditory phonological and visual motion perception tasks. This minimal behavioural and functional anatomical comorbidity demonstrates that a specific deficit of reading is the best description for developmental dyslexia, at least for adult well-compensated cases, with clear implications for rehabilitation strategies. The reduced intersection of multiple systems in the l-OTC suggests that dyslexics suffer from a coarser connectivity, leading to disconnection between the multiple domains that normally interact during reading.
- Published
- 2017
39. Resting state brain connectivity patterns before eventual relapse into cocaine abuse
- Author
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Berlingeri, M, Losasso, D, Girolo, A, Cozzolino, E, Masullo, T, Scotto, M, Sberna, M, Bottini, G, Paulesu, E, BERLINGERI, MANUELA, MASULLO, TIZIANA, SBERNA, MAURIZIO, PAULESU, ERALDO, Berlingeri, M, Losasso, D, Girolo, A, Cozzolino, E, Masullo, T, Scotto, M, Sberna, M, Bottini, G, Paulesu, E, BERLINGERI, MANUELA, MASULLO, TIZIANA, SBERNA, MAURIZIO, and PAULESU, ERALDO
- Abstract
According to recent theories, drug addicted patients suffer of an impaired response inhibition and salience attribution (I-RISA) together with a perturbed connectivity between the nuclei accumbens (NAcs) and the orbito-prefrontal (oPFC) and dorsal prefrontal (dPFC) cortices, brain regions associated with motivation and cognitive control. To empirically test these assumptions, we evaluated the (neuro)psychological trait and the functional organization of the resting state brain networks associated with the NAcs in 18 former cocaine abusers (FCAs), while being in drug abstinence since 5 months. The psychological data were grouped into three empirical variables related with emotion regulation, emotion awareness and strategic and controlled behaviour. Comparison of the resting state patterns between the entire sample of FCAs and 19 controls revealed a reduction of functional connectivity between the NAcs and the dPFC and enhanced connectivity between the NAcs and the dorsal-striatum. In the 8 FCAs who relapsed into cocaine use after 3 months, the level of functional connectivity between the NAcs and dPFC was lower than the functional connectivity estimated in the group of patients that did not relapsed. Finally, in the entire sample of FCAs, the higher the connectivity between the NAc and the oPFC the lower was the level of strategic and controlled behaviour. Taken together, these results are compatible with models of the interactions between the NAcs, the dorsal striatum and frontal cortices in the I-RISA syndrome, showing that such interactions are particularly perturbed in patients at greater risk of relapse into cocaine abuse.
- Published
- 2017
40. Neurofunctional and Neuromorphological Evidence of the Lack of Compensation in Pathological Aging
- Author
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Berlingeri, M., Sacheli, L., Danelli, L., Ferri, F., Traficante, D., Basilico, S., Sberna, M., Sterzi, R., Bottini, G., Paulesu, E., Berlingeri, M, Sacheli, L, Danelli, L, Ferri, F, Traficante, D, Basilico, S, Sberna, M, Sterzi, R, Bottini, G, and Paulesu, E
- Subjects
Male ,Aging ,fMRI, aging ,Brain ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Recognition, Psychology ,General Medicine ,Neuropsychological Tests ,M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,Hippocampus ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Judgment ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Neurology ,Memory ,Visual Perception ,Humans ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Amnesia ,Cognition Disorders ,RC321-571 ,Research Article ,Aged - Published
- 2011
41. How many deficits in the same dyslexic brains? Behavioural and fMRI evidence
- Author
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Danelli, L., Berlingeri, Manuela, Lucchese, M., Borghese, A., Sberna, M., Bottini, G., and Paulesu, E.
- Published
- 2016
42. Reassessing the HAROLD model: Is the hemispheric asymmetry reduction in older adults a special case of compensatory-related utilisation of neural circuits?
- Author
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Berlingeri, M, Danelli, L, Bottini, G, Sberna, M, Paulesu, E, BERLINGERI, MANUELA, DANELLI, LAURA, PAULESU, ERALDO, Bottini, G., Berlingeri, M, Danelli, L, Bottini, G, Sberna, M, Paulesu, E, BERLINGERI, MANUELA, DANELLI, LAURA, PAULESU, ERALDO, and Bottini, G.
- Abstract
The HAROLD (hemispheric asymmetry reduction in older adults) model, proposed by Cabeza in 2002, suggests that age-related neurofunctional changes are characterised by a significant reduction in the functional hemispheric lateralisation in the prefrontal cortex (PFC). The supporting evidence, however, has been derived from qualitative explorations of the data rather than from explicit statistical assessments of functional lateralisation. In contrast, the CRUNCH (compensation-related utilisation of neural circuits hypothesis) model posits that elderly subjects recruit additional brain regions that do not necessarily belong to the contralateral hemisphere as much as they rely on additional strategies to solve cognitive problems. To better assess the validity and generalisability of the HAROLD model, we analysed the fMRI patterns of twenty-four young subjects (age range: 18–30 years) and twenty-four healthy elderly subjects (age range: 50–80 years) collected during the performance of two linguistic/semantic tasks (a picture-naming task and a sentence judgment task) and two episodic long-term memory (eLTM) recognition tasks for the same materials. The functional hemispheric lateralisation in each group and the ensuing between-group differences were quantitatively assessed using statistical lateralisation maps (SLMs). The number of clusters showing a genuine HAROLD effect was proportional to the level of task demand. In addition, when quantitatively significant, these effects were not restricted to the PFC. We conclude that, in its original version, the HAROLD model captures only some of the age-related brain patterns observed in graceful ageing. The results observed in our study are compatible with the more general CRUNCH model, suggesting that the former patterns can be considered a special manifestation of age-related compensatory processes.
- Published
- 2013
43. Il disturbo di lettura nei pazienti con epilessia farmaco-resistente (EFFR)
- Author
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Derada, I, Danelli, L, Scarpa, P, Francione, S, Lo Russo, G, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, Bottini, G., DANELLI, LAURA, PAULESU, ERALDO, Derada, I, Danelli, L, Scarpa, P, Francione, S, Lo Russo, G, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, Bottini, G., DANELLI, LAURA, and PAULESU, ERALDO
- Abstract
INTRODUZIONE Numerosi studi in letteratura hanno evidenziato come i bambini affetti da epilessia e, in particolare, da epilessia focale farmaco-resistente (EFFR), risultino maggiormente esposti al rischio di sviluppare deficit cognitivi e disturbi specifici dell’apprendimento (1,2). L’incidenza dei disturbi di apprendimento nei bambini con diagnosi di epilessia è, infatti, più elevata rispetto alla popolazione generale (3,4). La relazione tra epilessia, cognizione e apprendimento va però considerata con cautela, poiché si tratta di un legame complesso e multifattoriale (5). Il deficit di lettura, in particolare, si presenta frequentemente nei pazienti con diagnosi di EFFR. Tuttavia, resta ancora da definire quali siano le variabili cliniche potenzialmente implicate nella sua eziologia e, soprattutto, non è ancora chiaro in quale quadro cognitivo il disturbo si inserisca, ovvero se esso rappresenti più frequentemente la conseguenza di un deficit cognitivo globale, oppure se dipenda da specifiche e circoscritte difficoltà cognitive sottostanti il processo di lettura, come si verifica nella dislessia evolutiva. In questo studio ci siamo proposti di valutare, attraverso un’analisi retrospettiva dei dati clinici, il profilo neuropsicologico pre-chirurgico di un gruppo di 13 bambini con EFFR e deficit di lettura, rispetto a quello di un gruppo di soggetti con EFFR senza deficit di lettura e di delineare l’evoluzione del quadro cognitivo dopo sei mesi dall’intervento chirurgico in entrambi i gruppi. Inoltre, al fine di indagare quali fattori fossero implicati nell’eziologia dei disturbi di lettura, abbiamo confrontato i due gruppi rispetto ad alcune variabili cliniche e demografiche di interesse quali: l’età d’esordio della malattia, la durata dell’epilessia, la localizzazione e lateralizzazione del focus epilettogeno, la natura della lesione sottostante l’epilessia, l’esito dell’intervento chirurgico e il genere. MATERIALI E METODI Sono stati inclusi nello studio, SUMMARY Children with epilepsy, especially those with drug-resistant focal epilepsy, appear to be particularly exposed to the risk of developing learning disabilities, such as dyslexia. However it is not always clear what type of neuropsychological profile is associated to the reading deficiency in this population and which clinical variables are involved in its etiology. In the following retrospective study we compared the performance in several cognitive domains of two groups of 13 children suffering from drug-resistant focal epilepsy, one with and one without reading disability, before and six months after surgery. Furthermore, in order to investigate which factors were involved in the etiology of dyslexia, we compared the two groups with respect to some clinical variables. The results showed a globally impaired cognitive profile among children with reading disability, as compared to that of children without reading disability, both before and after surgery. Even though both groups tended to maintain stability in almost every cognitive domain at six months after surgery, children without reading disabilities showed significant improvement in a few areas of cognition that were stable in children with dyslexia. Finally, with respect to clinical variables, our results showed that the presence of dyslexia was more likely associated with an earlier onset and longer duration of epilepsy and furthermore, it was more likely to occur in children suffering from epilepsy due to malformations of cortical development. These results suggest that reading disabilities in children with drug-resistant focal epilepsy are generally associated with a more severe clinical and cognitive profile.
- Published
- 2012
44. An anatomical account of somatoparaphrenia
- Author
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Gandola, M, Invernizzi, P, Sedda, A, Ferrè, E, Sterzi, R, Sberna, M, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, GANDOLA, MARTINA, INVERNIZZI, PAOLA, Ferrè, ER, PAULESU, ERALDO, Bottini, G., Gandola, M, Invernizzi, P, Sedda, A, Ferrè, E, Sterzi, R, Sberna, M, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, GANDOLA, MARTINA, INVERNIZZI, PAOLA, Ferrè, ER, PAULESU, ERALDO, and Bottini, G.
- Abstract
Somatoparaphrenia is a delusional belief whereby a patient feels that a paralyzed limb does not belong to his body; the symptom is typically associated with unilateral neglect and most frequently with anosognosia for hemiplegia. This association of symptoms makes anatomical inference based on single case studies not sufficiently specific. On the other hand, the only three anatomical group studies on somatoparaphrenia are contradictory: the right posterior insula, the supramarginal gyrus and the posterior corona radiata, or the right medial or orbito-frontal regions were all proposed as specific lesional correlates.We compared 11 patients with and 11 without somatoparaphrenia matched for the presence and severity of other associated symptoms (neglect, motor deficits and anosognosia). To take into account the frequent association of SP and neglect and hemiplegia, patients with and without somatoparaphrenia were also compared with a group of fifteen right brain damage patients without neglect and hemiplegia. We found a lesion pattern involving a fronto-temporo-parietal network typically associated with spatial neglect, hemiplegia and anosognosia. Somatoparaphrenic patients showed an additional lesion pattern primarily involving white matter and subcortical grey structures (thalamus, basal ganglia and amygdala). Further cortical damage was present in the middle and inferior frontal gyrus, postcentral gyrus and hippocampus.We propose that somatoparaphrenia occurs providing that a distributed cortical lesion pattern is present together with a subcortical lesion load that prevents most sensory input from being processed in neocortical structures; involvement of deep cortical and subcortical grey structures of the temporal lobe may contribute to reduce the sense of familiarity experienced by somatoparaphrenic patients for their paralyzed limb. © 2011 Elsevier Srl.
- Published
- 2012
45. How many deficits in the same dyslexic brains? Behavioral and fMRI assessment of competing theories
- Author
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Paulesu, E, Danelli, L, Bottini, G, PAULESU, ERALDO, DANELLI, LAURA, Bottini, G., Paulesu, E, Danelli, L, Bottini, G, PAULESU, ERALDO, DANELLI, LAURA, and Bottini, G.
- Abstract
Introduction: There is broad consensus that dyslexia is associated with phonological deficits. However, it is still a matter of debate how these deficits are brought about and the meaning of additional deficits observed in subjects with dyslexia. One theory postulates that a phonological deficit is sufficient to explain the delayed reading acquisition. Two other major competing theories propose that the phonological deficit and the delayed reading acquisition are the result of a more basic disorder either of the magnocellular visual and auditory systems or of the cerebellum. The observation of a systematic co-morbidity of these disorders would reinforce the motion that multiple deficits contribute to the poor reading performance of the subjects with dyslexia. However, the majority of the imaging studies have investigated only one variable in the same sample of subjects. Our aim was to re-assess the co-morbidity issue in dyslexia using both behavioural and imaging techniques in the same subjects. Methods: 23 healthy adults and 8 dyslexics were tested with tasks tackling non-word reading, phonological awareness, visual motion perception and motor learning skills. The same subjects were also tested with fMRI tasks tackling the same skilled previously assessed at the behavioral level: non-word reading, phonological awareness for auditorially presented syllables; visual motion perception and motor learning. The fMRI experiments conformed to block designs. The behavioural data of the subjects with dyslexia were compared with those of the normal controls by calculating Z-score values. fMRI data were assessed using SPM. Main effects of the tasks for each group were calculated as well as group by task interaction effects. Results: The behavioural tests confirmed a phonological deficit in all dyslexics, a deficit occasionally associated with “visual/magnocellular” or “motor/cerebellar” soft signs. fMRI showed a reduced activation of the left inferior-temporal and ventral occi
- Published
- 2010
46. The physiology of mind
- Author
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Marzi, C, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, Marzi, CA, Bottini, G., PAULESU, ERALDO, Marzi, C, Paulesu, E, Bottini, G, Marzi, CA, Bottini, G., and PAULESU, ERALDO
- Published
- 2009
47. Neural intersections of the phonological, visual magnocellular and motor/cerebellar systems in normal readers: Implications for imaging studies on dyslexia
- Author
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DANELLI, LAURA, BERLINGERI, MANUELA, Bottini, G, FERRI, FRANCESCA, Vacchi, L, Sberna, M, PAULESU, ERALDO, Danelli, L, Berlingeri, M, Bottini, G, Ferri, F, Vacchi, L, Sberna, M, and Paulesu, E
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,genetic structures ,cerebellum ,reading ,developmental dyslexia ,occipitotemporal cortex ,fMRI ,Developmental dyslexia ,Models, Neurological ,Motion Perception ,Models, Psychological ,Motor Activity ,M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Dyslexia ,Young Adult ,Phonetics ,Cerebellum ,Humans ,Learning ,Research Articles ,Occipitotemporal cortex ,Motor Cortex ,Brain ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Temporal Lobe ,Reading ,FMRI ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Auditory Perception ,Speech Perception ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Occipital Lobe ,Nerve Net ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
We used fMRI to explore the extent of the anatomical overlap of three neural systems that the literature on developmental dyslexia associates with reading: the auditory phonological, the visual magnocellular, and the motor/cerebellar systems. Twenty‐eight normal subjects performed four tasks during fMRI scans: word and pseudoword reading, auditory rhyming for letter names, visual motion perception, and a motor sequence learning task. We found that the left occipitotemporal cortex (OTC), which previous studies reported to be dysfunctional in dyslexia, can be fractionated into different functional areas: an anterior and lateral area that was activated by both reading and auditory rhyming tasks; a posterior area that was commonly activated by both the reading and the motion perception task and a medial/intermediate area, including the so‐called Visual Word Form Area, which was specifically activated by the reading task. These results show that the left OTC is an area of segregated convergence of different functional systems. We compared our results with the hypoactivation pattern reported for reading in a previous cross‐cultural PET study on 36 dyslexic subjects from three countries. The region of decreased activation in dyslexia overlapped with regions that are specific for reading and those activated during both the auditory rhyming task and the single word and pseudoword reading task described in the present fMRI study. No overlap was found with the activation patterns for the visual motion perception task or for the motor sequence learning task. These observations challenge current theories of dyslexia. Hum Brain Mapp 34:2669–2687, 2013. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
- Published
- 2012
48. Trattamento riabilitativo e continuità dell'assistenza
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Gensini, GF, Zaninelli, A, Provinciali, L, Bottini, G, Cappa, S, Ceravolo, M, Cerri, C, Coccia, M, Consolmagno, P, Corea, F, Di Bari, M, Flosi, C, Frediani, R, Gandolfi, M, Masotti, G, Mezzarobba, S, Paolucci, S, Pasotti, F, Salina, M, Smania, N, Stramba-Badiale, M, Zampolini, M, Ceravolo, MG, Cerri, CG, Zaninelli, A., Gensini, GF, Zaninelli, A, Provinciali, L, Bottini, G, Cappa, S, Ceravolo, M, Cerri, C, Coccia, M, Consolmagno, P, Corea, F, Di Bari, M, Flosi, C, Frediani, R, Gandolfi, M, Masotti, G, Mezzarobba, S, Paolucci, S, Pasotti, F, Salina, M, Smania, N, Stramba-Badiale, M, Zampolini, M, Ceravolo, MG, Cerri, CG, and Zaninelli, A.
- Published
- 2016
49. Tower of London test: a comparison between conventional statistic approach and modelling based on artificial neural network in differentiating fronto-temporal dementia from Alzheimer's disease
- Author
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Franceschi, M, Caffarra, P, Savarè, R, Cerutti, R, Grossi, E, Tol Research Group Padovani, A, Nieddu, A, Clerici, F, Bottini, G, Lamenza, F, Gambina, G, Magnani, G, Perri, R, Alberoni, M, Gallucci, M, Scoppa, F, Lorusso, S, Murialdo, G, Cester, A. Stracciari, A, Mina, C, Tripi, G, De Vreese, LP, Monastero, R., APPOLLONIO, ILDEBRANDO, Franceschi, M, Caffarra, P, Savarè, R, Cerutti, R, Grossi, E, Tol Research Group - Padovani, A, Nieddu, A, Clerici, F, Bottini, G, Lamenza, F, Gambina, G, Magnani, G, Perri, R, Alberoni, M: Gallucci, M, Scoppa, F, Lorusso, S, Murialdo, G, Cester, A, Stracciari, A, Appollonio, I, Mina, C, Tripi, G, De Vreese, LP, Monastero, R, Tol Research Group Padovani, A, Alberoni, M, Gallucci, M, Cester, A., S, A, and De Vreese, L
- Subjects
Male ,Models, Neurological ,neuropsychology ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Tower of London ,Neuropsychological Tests ,frontotemporal dementia ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Executive Function ,Alzheimer's disease, frontotemporal dementia, Tower of London, neuropsychology, executive functions ,Alzheimer Disease ,mental disorders ,Humans ,Aged ,MED/26 - NEUROLOGIA ,Aged, 80 and over ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,executive functions ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Neurology ,Nonlinear Dynamics ,test, torre di Londra, neuropsicologia, demenza ,Female ,Settore MED/26 - Neurologia ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neural Networks, Computer ,Alzheimer’s disease ,RC321-571 ,Research Article - Abstract
The early differentiation of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) from frontotemporal dementia (FTD) may be difficult. The Tower of London (ToL), thought to assess executive functions such as planning and visuo-spatial working memory, could help in this purpose. Twentytwo Dementia Centers consecutively recruited patients with early FTD or AD. ToL performances of these groups were analyzed using both the conventional statistical approaches and the Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs) modelling. Ninety-four non aphasic FTD and 160 AD patients were recruited. ToL Accuracy Score (AS) significantly (p < 0.05) The use of hidden information contained in the different items of ToL and the non linear processing of the data through ANNs allows a high discrimination between FTD and AD in individual patients. However, the discriminant validity of AS checked by ROC curve analysis, yielded no significant results in terms of sensitivity and specificity (AUC 0.63). The performances of the 12 Success Subscores (SS) together with age, gender and schooling years were entered into advanced ANNs developed by Semeion Institute. The best ANNs were selected and submitted to ROC curves. The nonlinear model was able to discriminate FTD from AD with an average AUC for 7 independent trials of 0.82. The use of hidden information contained in the different items of ToL and the non linear processing of the data through ANNs allows a high discrimination between FTD and AD in individual patients.
- Published
- 2011
50. Complicanze psico-cognitive dell'ictus
- Author
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Micieli, G, Bottini, G, Consoli, D, Cavallini, MC, Del Sette, M, Di Bari, M, Di Piero, V, Gandolfo, C, Guidetti, D, Pantoni, L, Paolucci, S, Racagni, G, Sgoifo, A, Torta, R, Toso, V, Zarcone, D., CERRI, CESARE GIUSEPPE, Gensini, GF, Zaninelli, A, Micieli, G, Bottini, G, Cerri, C, Consoli, D, Cavallini, M, Del Sette, M, Di Bari, M, Di Piero, V, Gandolfo, C, Guidetti, D, Pantoni, L, Paolucci, S, Racagni, G, Sgoifo, A, Torta, R, Toso, V, Zarcone, D, and Gensino, GF
- Subjects
MED/34 - MEDICINA FISICA E RIABILITATIVA ,rehabilitation, stroke, depression - Published
- 2010
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