41 results on '"Arnaldi, Dario"'
Search Results
2. Limbic Network Derangement Mediates Unawareness of Apathy in Mild Cognitive Impairment due to Alzheimer's Disease: Clues from [18F]FDG PET Voxel-Wise Analysis.
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Kreshpa, Wendy, Raffa, Stefano, Girtler, Nicola, Brugnolo, Andrea, Mattioli, Pietro, Orso, Beatrice, Calizzano, Francesco, Arnaldi, Dario, Peira, Enrico, Chincarini, Andrea, Tagliafico, Luca, Monacelli, Fiammetta, Calcagno, Pietro, Serafini, Gianluca, Gotta, Fabio, Mandich, Paola, Pretta, Stefano, Del Sette, Massimo, Sofia, Luca, and Sambuceti, Gianmario
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MILD cognitive impairment ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,CINGULATE cortex ,BRAIN metabolism ,CAREGIVERS - Abstract
Background: Discrepancy between caregiver and patient assessments of apathy in mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is considered an index of apathy unawareness, independently predicting progression to AD dementia. However, its neural underpinning are uninvestigated. Objective: To explore the [
18 F]FDG PET-based metabolic correlates of apathy unawareness measured through the discrepancy between caregiver and patient self-report, in patients diagnosed with MCI. Methods: We retrospectively studied 28 patients with an intermediate or high likelihood of MCI-AD, progressed to dementia over an average of two years, whose degree of apathy was evaluated by means of the Apathy Evaluation Scale (AES) for both patients (PT-AES) and caregivers (CG-AES). Voxel-based analysis at baseline was used to obtain distinct volumes of interest (VOIs) correlated with PT-AES, CG-AES, or their absolute difference (DISCR-AES). The resulting DISCR-AES VOI count densities were used as covariates in an inter-regional correlation analysis (IRCA) in MCI-AD patients and a group of matched healthy controls (HC). Results: DISCR-AES negatively correlated with metabolism in bilateral parahippocampal gyrus, posterior cingulate cortex, and thalamus, PT-AES score with frontal and anterior cingulate areas, while there was no significant correlation between CG-AES and brain metabolism. IRCA revealed that MCI-AD patients exhibited reduced metabolic/functional correlations of the DISCR-AES VOI with the right cingulate gyrus and its anterior projections compared to HC. Conclusions: Apathy unawareness entails early disruption of the limbic circuitry rather than the classical frontal-subcortical pathways typically associated with apathy. This reaffirms apathy unawareness as an early and independent measure in MCI-AD, marked by distinct pathophysiological alterations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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3. Cerebrospinal fluid NPTX2 changes and relationship with regional brain metabolism metrics across mild cognitive impairment due to Alzheimer's disease.
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Massa, Federico, Martinuzzo, Caterina, Gómez de San José, Nerea, Pelagotti, Virginia, Kreshpa, Wendy, Abu-Rumeileh, Samir, Barba, Lorenzo, Mattioli, Pietro, Orso, Beatrice, Brugnolo, Andrea, Girtler, Nicola, Vigo, Tiziana, Arnaldi, Dario, Serrati, Carlo, Uccelli, Antonio, Morbelli, Silvia, Chincarini, Andrea, Otto, Markus, and Pardini, Matteo
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BRAIN metabolism ,MILD cognitive impairment ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,CEREBROSPINAL fluid ,POSITRON emission tomography - Abstract
Background: Neuronal pentraxin-2 (NPTX2), crucial for synaptic functioning, declines in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) as cognition deteriorates. The variations of CSF NPTX2 across mild cognitive impairment (MCI) due to Alzheimer's disease (AD) and its association with brain metabolism remain elusive, albeit relevant for patient stratification and pathophysiological insights. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 49 MCI-AD patients grouped by time until dementia (EMCI, n = 34 progressing within 2 years; LMCI, n = 15 progressing later/stable at follow-up). We analyzed demographic variables, cognitive status (MMSE score), and CSF NPTX2 levels using a commercial ELISA assay in EMCI, LMCI, and a control group of age-/sex-matched individuals with other non-dementing disorders (OND). Using [
18 F]FDG PET scans for voxel-based analysis, we explored correlations between regional brain metabolism metrics and CSF NPTX2 levels in MCI-AD patients, accounting for age. Results: Baseline and follow-up MMSE scores were lower in LMCI than EMCI (p value = 0.006 and p < 0.001). EMCI exhibited significantly higher CSF NPTX2 values than both LMCI (p = 0.028) and OND (p = 0.006). We found a significant positive correlation between NPTX2 values and metabolism of bilateral precuneus in MCI-AD patients (p < 0.005 at voxel level, p < 0.05 with family-wise error correction at the cluster level). Conclusions: Higher CSF NPTX2 in EMCI compared to controls and LMCI suggests compensatory synaptic responses to initial AD pathology. Disease progression sees these mechanisms overwhelmed, lowering CSF NPTX2 approaching dementia. Positive CSF NPTX2 correlation with precuneus glucose metabolism links to AD-related metabolic changes across MCI course. These findings posit CSF NPTX2 as a promising biomarker for both AD staging and progression risk stratification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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4. Tracking the progression of Alzheimer's disease: Insights from metabolic patterns of SOMI stages.
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Brugnolo, Andrea, Orso, Beatrice, Girtler, Nicola, Ferraro, Pilar Maria, Arnaldi, Dario, Mattioli, Pietro, Massa, Federico, Famà, Francesco, Argenti, Lucia, Biffa, Gabriella, Morganti, Wanda, Buonopane, Silvia, Uccelli, Antonio, Morbelli, Silvia, and Pardini, Matteo
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ALZHEIMER'S disease ,NEURODEGENERATION ,MILD cognitive impairment ,METABOLIC regulation ,MEMORY - Published
- 2024
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5. Cortical Network Topology in Prodromal and Mild Dementia Due to Alzheimer’s Disease: Graph Theory Applied to Resting State EEG
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Franciotti, Raffaella, Falasca, Nicola Walter, Arnaldi, Dario, Famà, Francesco, Babiloni, Claudio, Onofrj, Marco, Nobili, Flavio Mariano, and Bonanni, Laura
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- 2019
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6. Early identification of MCI converting to AD: a FDG PET study
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Pagani, Marco, Nobili, Flavio, Morbelli, Silvia, Arnaldi, Dario, Giuliani, Alessandro, Öberg, Johanna, Girtler, Nicola, Brugnolo, Andrea, Picco, Agnese, Bauckneht, Matteo, Piva, Roberta, Chincarini, Andrea, Sambuceti, Gianmario, Jonsson, Cathrine, and De Carli, Fabrizio
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- 2017
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7. 18F–FDG PET diagnostic and prognostic patterns do not overlap in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients at the mild cognitive impairment (MCI) stage
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Morbelli, Silvia, Bauckneht, Matteo, Arnaldi, Dario, Picco, Agnese, Pardini, Matteo, Brugnolo, Andrea, Buschiazzo, Ambra, Pagani, Marco, Girtler, Nicola, Nieri, Alberto, Chincarini, Andrea, De Carli, Fabrizio, Sambuceti, Gianmario, and Nobili, Flavio
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- 2017
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8. Neuroimaging Findings in Mild Cognitive Impairment
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Nobili, Flavio, Arnaldi, Dario, Roccatagliata, Luca, Chincarini, Andrea, Accardo, Jennifer, Picco, Agnese, Ferrara, Michela, Buschiazzo, Ambra, Morbelli, Silvia, Dierckx, Rudi A.J.O., editor, Otte, Andreas, editor, de Vries, Erik F.J., editor, van Waarde, Aren, editor, and Leenders, Klaus L., editor
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- 2014
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9. Metabolic correlates of reserve and resilience in MCI due to Alzheimer's Disease (AD)
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Bauckneht, Matteo, Chincarini, Andrea, Piva, Roberta, Arnaldi, Dario, Girtler, Nicola, Massa, Federico, Pardini, Matteo, Grazzini, Matteo, Efeturk, Hulya, Pagani, Marco, Sambuceti, Gianmario, Nobili, Flavio, and Morbelli, Silvia
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- 2018
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10. Mapping brain morphological and functional conversion patterns in predementia late-onset bvFTD
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Morbelli, Silvia, Ferrara, Michela, Fiz, Francesco, Dessi, Barbara, Arnaldi, Dario, Picco, Agnese, Bossert, Irene, Buschiazzo, Ambra, Accardo, Jennifer, Picori, Lorena, Girtler, Nicola, Mandich, Paola, Pagani, Marco, Sambuceti, Gianmario, and Nobili, Flavio
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- 2016
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11. Plasma antioxidants and brain glucose metabolism in elderly subjects with cognitive complaints
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Picco, Agnese, Polidori, M. Cristina, Ferrara, Michela, Cecchetti, Roberta, Arnaldi, Dario, Baglioni, Mauro, Morbelli, Silvia, Bastiani, Patrizia, Bossert, Irene, Fiorucci, Giuliana, Brugnolo, Andrea, Dottorini, Massimo Eugenio, Nobili, Flavio, and Mecocci, Patrizia
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- 2014
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12. Cognitive and Brain Metabolism Profiles of Mild Cognitive Impairment in Prodromal Alpha-Synucleinopathy.
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Mattioli, Pietro, Pardini, Matteo, Girtler, Nicola, Brugnolo, Andrea, Orso, Beatrice, Donniaquio, Andrea, Calizzano, Francesco, Mancini, Raffaele, Massa, Federico, Terzaghi, Michele, Bauckneht, Matteo, Morbelli, Silvia, Sambuceti, Gianmario, Nobili, Flavio, and Arnaldi, Dario
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BRAIN metabolism ,BRAIN ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,COGNITION ,NEURODEGENERATION - Abstract
Background: Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is a heterogeneous condition. Idiopathic REM sleep behavior disorder (iRBD) can be associated with MCI (MCI-RBD).Objective: To investigate neuropsychological and brain metabolism features of patients with MCI-RBD by comparison with matched MCI-AD patients. To explore their predictive value toward conversion to a full-blown neurodegenerative disease.Methods: Seventeen MCI-RBD patients (73.6±6.5 years) were enrolled. Thirty-four patients with MCI-AD were matched for age (74.8±4.4 years), Mini-Mental State Exam score and education with a case-control criterion. All patients underwent a neuropsychological assessment and brain 18F-FDG-PET. Images were compared between groups to identify hypometabolic volumes of interest (MCI-RBD-VOI and MCI-AD-VOI). The dependency of whole-brain scaled metabolism levels in MCI-RBD-VOI and MCI-AD-VOI on neuropsychological test scores was explored with linear regression analyses in both groups, adjusting for age and education. Survival analysis was performed to investigate VOIs phenoconversion prediction power.Results: MCI-RBD group scored lower in executive functions and higher in verbal memory compared to MCI-AD group. Also, compared with MCI-AD, MCI-RBD group showed relative hypometabolism in a posterior brain area including cuneus, precuneus, and occipital regions while the inverse comparison revealed relative hypometabolism in the hippocampus/parahippocampal areas in MCI-AD group. MCI-RBD-VOI metabolism directly correlated with executive functions in MCI-RBD (p = 0.04). MCI-AD-VOI metabolism directly correlated with verbal memory in MCI-AD (p = 0.001). MCI-RBD-VOI metabolism predicted (p = 0.03) phenoconversion to an alpha-synucleinopathy. MCI-AD-VOI metabolism showed a trend (p = 0.07) in predicting phenoconversion to dementia.Conclusion: MCI-RBD and MCI-AD showed distinct neuropsychological and brain metabolism profiles, that may be helpful for both diagnosis and prognosis purposes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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13. The Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test: Discriminative Values in a Naturalistic Cohort.
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Girtler, Nicola, Chincarini, Andrea, Brugnolo, Andrea, Doglione, Elisa, Orso, Beatrice, Morbelli, Silvia, Massa, Federico, Peira, Enrico, Biassoni, Erica, Donniaquio, Andrea, Grisanti, Stefano, Pardini, Matteo, Arnaldi, Dario, and Nobili, Flavio
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ALZHEIMER'S disease diagnosis ,MEMORY ,RESEARCH ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION research ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PROMPTS (Psychology) - Abstract
Background: Neuropsychological assessment is still the basis for the first evaluation of patients with cognitive complaints. The Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test (FCSRT) generates several indices that could have different accuracy in the differential diagnosis between Alzheimer's disease (AD) and other disorders.Objective: In a consecutive series of naturalistic patients, the accuracy of the FCSRT indices in differentiating patients with either mild cognitive impairment (MCI) due to AD or AD dementia from other competing conditions was evaluated.Methods: We evaluated the accuracy of the seven FCSRT indices in differentiating patients with AD from other competing conditions in 434 consecutive outpatients, either at the MCI or at the early dementia stage. We analyzed these data through the receiver operating characteristics curve, and we then generated the odds-ratio map of the two indices with the best discriminative value between pairs of disorders.Results: The immediate and the delayed free total recall, the immediate total recall, and the index of sensitivity of cueing were the most useful indices and allowed to distinguish AD from dementia with Lewy bodies and psychiatric conditions with very high accuracy. Accuracy was instead moderate in distinguishing AD from behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia, vascular cognitive impairment, and other conditions.Conclusion: By using odd-ratio maps and comparison-customized cut-off scores, we confirmed that the FCSRT represents a useful tool to characterize the memory performance of patients with MCI and thus to assist the clinician in the diagnosis process, though with different accuracy values depending on the clinical hypothesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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14. Added value of semiquantitative analysis of brain FDG-PET for the differentiation between MCI-Lewy bodies and MCI due to Alzheimer's disease.
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Massa, Federico, Chincarini, Andrea, Bauckneht, Matteo, Raffa, Stefano, Peira, Enrico, Arnaldi, Dario, Pardini, Matteo, Pagani, Marco, Orso, Beatrice, Donegani, Maria Isabella, Brugnolo, Andrea, Biassoni, Erica, Mattioli, Pietro, Girtler, Nicola, Guerra, Ugo Paolo, Morbelli, Silvia, and Nobili, Flavio
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ALZHEIMER'S disease ,LEWY body dementia ,BIOLOGICAL tags ,DEMENTIA ,MILD cognitive impairment - Abstract
Purpose: FDG-PET is an established supportive biomarker in dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), but its diagnostic accuracy is unknown at the mild cognitive impairment (MCI-LB) stage when the typical metabolic pattern may be difficultly recognized at the individual level. Semiquantitative analysis of scans could enhance accuracy especially in less skilled readers, but its added role with respect to visual assessment in MCI-LB is still unknown. Methods: We assessed the diagnostic accuracy of visual assessment of FDG-PET by six expert readers, blind to diagnosis, in discriminating two matched groups of patients (40 with prodromal AD (MCI-AD) and 39 with MCI-LB), both confirmed by in vivo biomarkers. Readers were provided in a stepwise fashion with (i) maps obtained by the univariate single-subject voxel-based analysis (VBA) with respect to a control group of 40 age- and sex-matched healthy subjects, and (ii) individual odds ratio (OR) plots obtained by the volumetric regions of interest (VROI) semiquantitative analysis of the two main hypometabolic clusters deriving from the comparison of MCI-AD and MCI-LB groups in the two directions, respectively. Results: Mean diagnostic accuracy of visual assessment was 76.8 ± 5.0% and did not significantly benefit from adding the univariate VBA map reading (77.4 ± 8.3%) whereas VROI-derived OR plot reading significantly increased both accuracy (89.7 ± 2.3%) and inter-rater reliability (ICC 0.97 [0.96–0.98]), regardless of the readers' expertise. Conclusion: Conventional visual reading of FDG-PET is moderately accurate in distinguishing between MCI-LB and MCI-AD, and is not significantly improved by univariate single-subject VBA but by a VROI analysis built on macro-regions, allowing for high accuracy independent of reader skills. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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15. The Role of Hub and Spoke Regions in Theory of Mind in Early Alzheimer's Disease and Frontotemporal Dementia.
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Orso, Beatrice, Lorenzini, Luigi, Arnaldi, Dario, Girtler, Nicola, Brugnolo, Andrea, Doglione, Elisa, Mattioli, Pietro, Biassoni, Erica, Massa, Federico, Peira, Enrico, Bauckneht, Matteo, Donegani, Maria I., Morbelli, Silvia, Nobili, Flavio, and Pardini, Matteo
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FRONTOTEMPORAL dementia ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,THEORY of mind ,MILD cognitive impairment ,LARGE-scale brain networks - Abstract
Theory of mind (ToM, the ability to attribute mental states to others) deficit is a frequent finding in neurodegenerative conditions, mediated by a diffuse brain network confirmed by
18 F-FDG-PET and MR imaging, involving frontal, temporal and parietal areas. However, the role of hubs and spokes network regions in ToM performance, and their respective damage, is still unclear. To study this mechanism, we combined ToM testing with brain18 F-FDG-PET imaging in 25 subjects with mild cognitive impairment due to Alzheimer's disease (MCI–AD), 24 subjects with the behavioral variant of frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) and 40 controls. Regions included in the ToM network were divided into hubs and spokes based on their structural connectivity and distribution of hypometabolism. The hubs of the ToM network were identified in frontal regions in both bvFTD and MCI–AD patients. A mediation analysis revealed that the impact of spokes damage on ToM performance was mediated by the integrity of hubs (p < 0.001), while the impact of hubs damage on ToM performance was independent from the integrity of spokes (p < 0.001). Our findings support the theory that a key role is played by the hubs in ToM deficits, suggesting that hubs could represent a final common pathway leading from the damage of spoke regions to clinical deficits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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16. Resting State Alpha Electroencephalographic Rhythms Are Differently Related to Aging in Cognitively Unimpaired Seniors and Patients with Alzheimer's Disease and Amnesic Mild Cognitive Impairment.
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Babiloni, Claudio, Ferri, Raffaele, Noce, Giuseppe, Lizio, Roberta, Lopez, Susanna, Lorenzo, Ivan, Tucci, Federico, Soricelli, Andrea, Nobili, Flavio, Arnaldi, Dario, Famà, Francesco, Orzi, Francesco, Buttinelli, Carla, Giubilei, Franco, Cipollini, Virginia, Marizzoni, Moira, Güntekin, Bahar, Aktürk, Tuba, Hanoğlu, Lutfu, and Yener, Görsev
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ALPHA rhythm ,OLDER people ,MILD cognitive impairment ,ALZHEIMER'S patients ,ADULTS ,PSYCHOLOGICAL aspects of aging ,RESEARCH ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,RESEARCH methodology ,COGNITION ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,RELAXATION for health ,COMPARATIVE studies ,AGING ,AMNESIA - Abstract
Background: In relaxed adults, staying in quiet wakefulness at eyes closed is related to the so-called resting state electroencephalographic (rsEEG) rhythms, showing the highest amplitude in posterior areas at alpha frequencies (8-13 Hz).Objective: Here we tested the hypothesis that age may affect rsEEG alpha (8-12 Hz) rhythms recorded in normal elderly (Nold) seniors and patients with mild cognitive impairment due to Alzheimer's disease (ADMCI).Methods: Clinical and rsEEG datasets in 63 ADMCI and 60 Nold individuals (matched for demography, education, and gender) were taken from an international archive. The rsEEG rhythms were investigated at individual delta, theta, and alpha frequency bands, as well as fixed beta (14-30 Hz) and gamma (30-40 Hz) bands. Each group was stratified into three subgroups based on age ranges (i.e., tertiles).Results: As compared to the younger Nold subgroups, the older one showed greater reductions in the rsEEG alpha rhythms with major topographical effects in posterior regions. On the contrary, in relation to the younger ADMCI subgroups, the older one displayed a lesser reduction in those rhythms. Notably, the ADMCI subgroups pointed to similar cerebrospinal fluid AD diagnostic biomarkers, gray and white matter brain lesions revealed by neuroimaging, and clinical and neuropsychological scores.Conclusion: The present results suggest that age may represent a deranging factor for dominant rsEEG alpha rhythms in Nold seniors, while rsEEG alpha rhythms in ADMCI patients may be more affected by the disease variants related to earlier versus later onset of the AD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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17. Cuneus/precuneus as a central hub for brain functional connectivity of mild cognitive impairment in idiopathic REM sleep behavior patients.
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Mattioli, Pietro, Pardini, Matteo, Famà, Francesco, Girtler, Nicola, Brugnolo, Andrea, Orso, Beatrice, Meli, Riccardo, Filippi, Laura, Grisanti, Stefano, Massa, Federico, Bauckneht, Matteo, Miceli, Alberto, Terzaghi, Michele, Morbelli, Silvia, Nobili, Flavio, and Arnaldi, Dario
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MILD cognitive impairment ,RAPID eye movement sleep ,FUNCTIONAL connectivity ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,CORPUS callosum ,BRAIN metabolism ,COGNITIVE ability - Abstract
Purpose: To investigate brain functional correlates of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) in idiopathic REM sleep behavior disorder (iRBD). Methods: Thirty-nine consecutive iRBD patients, 17 with (RBD-MCI, 73.6±6.5 years), and 22 without (RBD-NC, 69.6±6.1 years) MCI underwent neuropsychological assessment,
18 F-FDG-PET, and123 I-FP-CIT-SPECT as a marker of nigro-striatal dopaminergic function. Forty-two healthy subjects (69.6±8.5 years) were used as control for18 F-FDG-PET analysis. Brain metabolism was compared between the three groups by univariate analysis of variance. Post hoc comparison between RBD-MCI and RBD-NC was performed to investigate the presence of an MCI-related volume of interest (MCI-VOI). Brain functional connectivity was explored by interregional correlation analysis (IRCA), using the whole-brain normalized MCI-VOI uptake as the independent variable. Moreover, the MCI-VOI uptake was correlated with123 I-FP-CIT-SPECT specific-to-non displaceable binding ratios (SBR) and neuropsychological variables. Finally, the MCI-VOI white matter structural connectivity was analyzed by using a MRI-derived human atlas. Results: The MCI-VOI was characterized by a relative hypometabolism involving precuneus and cuneus (height threshold p<0.0001). IRCA (height threshold p<0.0001) revealed a brain functional network involving regions in frontal, temporal, parietal, and occipital lobes, thalamus, caudate, and red nuclei in iRBD patients. In controls, the network was smaller and involved temporal, occipital, cingulate cortex, and cerebellum. Moreover, MCI-VOI metabolism was correlated with verbal memory (p=0.01), executive functions (p=0.0001), and nigro-putaminal SBR (p=0.005). Finally, MCI-VOI was involved in a white matter network including cingulate fasciculus and corpus callosum. Conclusion: Our data suggest that cuneus/precuneus is a hub of a large functional network subserving cognitive function in iRBD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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18. Assessment of cognitive profile as a prodromal marker of the evolution of REM sleep Behavior Disorder
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Terzaghi, Michele, Toscano, Gianpaolo, Casoni, Francesca, Piscascia, Marta, Arnaldi, Dario, Rustioni, Valter, Versino, Maurizio, Sinforiani, Elena, and Manni, Raffaele
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Mild Cognitive Impairment ,Parkinsonism ,Parkinson’s disease ,REM sleep Behavior Disorder ,neurodegenerative disorders ,neuropsychological assessment ,phenoconversion risk - Published
- 2019
19. The fate of patients with REM sleep behavior disorder and mild cognitive impairment.
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Arnaldi, Dario, Chincarini, Andrea, De Carli, Fabrizio, Famà, Francesco, Girtler, Nicola, Brugnolo, Andrea, Pardini, Matteo, Massa, Federico, Meli, Riccardo, Schenone, Cristina, Bauckneht, Matteo, Morbelli, Silvia, and Nobili, Flavio
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RAPID eye movement sleep , *MILD cognitive impairment , *BEHAVIOR disorders , *SLEEP disorders , *COGNITION disorders , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests - Abstract
Objective: To investigate clinical and dopaminergic pre-synaptic brain imaging characteristics of subjects with idiopathic rapid eye movement (REM) behavior disorder (iRBD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and to evaluate the combined predictive value of risk factors for short-term conversion to synucleinopathy.Method: In sum, 44 polysomnography (PSG)-confirmed iRBD patients (68.5 ± 7.2 years; 38 males) underwent 123I-FP-CIT-SPECT, comprehensive neuropsychological evaluation, clinical examination and clinical follow-up every six months (30.6 ± 21.5 months). Step-wise logistic regression was applied to identify those features discriminating iRBD patients with (iRBD-MCI; n = 14) and without MCI (normal cognition [NC], iRBD-NC; n = 30). The risk of neurodegeneration was estimated with Kaplan-Meier analysis. Predictors of phenoconversion were assessed with Cox proportional-hazards analysis, adjusting for age, gender and education. A generalized linear model (GLM) was applied to define the best combination of risk factors predicting conversion at follow-up.Results: At baseline, patients with iRBD-MCI showed reduced striatal dopamine transporter (DAT) specific to non-displaceable binding ratio (SBR) and more constipation compared with iRBD-NC patients (p < 0.0001). During the follow-up, 10 patients (22.7%) develop an overt synucleinopathy. GLM analysis showed that patients with orthostatic hypotension, non-motor experiences of daily living, reduced putaminal DAT-SPECT SBR, and cognitive impairment in verbal memory/visuoconstruction abilities were at higher risk of phenoconversion (Hazard Ratio [HR] 26.05; Sensitivity 90%; Specificity 100%; Accuracy 97.73%; Positive Predictive Value 100%; Negative Predictive Value 97.14%).Conclusions: iRBD-MCI patients showed a more severe dopaminergic neuroimaging and clinical phenotype. Combining clinical and neuroimaging markers allowed to achieve excellent ability in identifying iRBD patients at high risk of developing a synucleinopathy within about three years from diagnosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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20. Metabolic correlates of reserve and resilience in MCI due to Alzheimer's Disease (AD) Rik Ossenkoppele
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Bauckneht, Matteo, Chincarini, Andrea, Piva, Roberta, Arnaldi, Dario, Girtler, Nicola, Massa, Federico, Pardini, Matteo, Grazzini, Matteo, Efeturk, Hulya, Pagani, Marco, Sambuceti, Gianmario, Nobili, Flavio, and Morbelli, Silvia
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Cognitive Reserve ,Resilience ,Neurology ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,18F-FDG PET, Alzheimer's disease, Cognitive Reserve, Mild cognitive impairment, Resilience, Neurology, Neurology (clinical), Cognitive Neuroscience ,Mild cognitive impairment ,Neurology (clinical) ,Alzheimer's disease ,18F-FDG PET - Published
- 2018
21. Multicenter Study on Sleep and Circadian Alterations as Objective Markers of Mild Cognitive Impairment and Alzheimer's Disease Reveals Sex Differences.
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Guarnieri, Biancamaria, Maestri, Michelangelo, Cucchiara, Federico, Lo Gerfo, Annalisa, Schirru, Alessandro, Arnaldi, Dario, Mattioli, Pietro, Nobili, Flavio, Lombardi, Gemma, Cerroni, Gianluigi, Bartoli, Antonella, Manni, Raffaele, Sinforiani, Elena, Terzaghi, Michele, Arena, Maria Grazia, Silvestri, Rosalia, La Morgia, Chiara, Di Perri, Maria Caterina, Franzoni, Ferdinando, and Tognoni, Gloria
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SEX factors in disease ,MILD cognitive impairment ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,SLEEP ,CIRCADIAN rhythms ,APOLIPOPROTEIN E4 ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,ACTIGRAPHY ,CASE-control method ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,SEX distribution ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Background: Circadian and sleep disturbances are associated with increased risk of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer's disease (AD). Wearable activity trackers could provide a new approach in diagnosis and prevention.Objective: To evaluate sleep and circadian rhythm parameters, through wearable activity trackers, in MCI and AD patients as compared to controls, focusing on sex dissimilarities.Methods: Based on minute level data from consumer wearable devices, we analyzed actigraphic sleep parameters by applying an electromedical type I registered algorithm, and the corresponding circadian variables in 158 subjects: 86 females and 72 males (42 AD, 28 MCI, and 88 controls). Moreover, we used a confusion-matrix chart method to assess accuracy, precision, sensitivity, and specificity of two decision-tree models based on actigraphic data in predicting disease or health status.Results: Wake after sleep onset (WASO) was higher (p < 0.001) and sleep efficiency (SE) lower (p = 0.003) in MCI, and Sleep Regularity Index (SRI) was lower in AD patients compared to controls (p = 0.004). SE was lower in male AD compared to female AD (p = 0.038) and SRI lower in male AD compared to male controls (p = 0.008), male MCI (p = 0.047), but also female AD subjects (p = 0.046). Mesor was significantly lower in males in the overall population. Age reduced the dissimilarities for WASO and SE but demonstrated sex differences for amplitude (p = 0.009) in the overall population, controls (p = 0.005), and AD subjects (p = 0.034). The confusion-matrices showed good predictive power of actigraphic data.Conclusion: Actigraphic data could help identify disease or health status. Sex (possibly gender) differences could impact on neurodegeneration and disease trajectory with potential clinical applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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22. Progressive disgregation of brain networking from normal aging to Alzhimer's Disease. Independent Component Analysis on FDG-PET data
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Pagani, Marco Me, Giuliani, Alessandro, Öberg, Johanna, DE CARLI, Fabrizio, Morbelli, Silvia, Girtler, NICOLA GIOVANNI, Bongioanni, Francesca, Arnaldi, Dario, Accardo, Jennifer, Bauckneht, Matteo, Chincarini, Andrea, Sambuceti, Gianmario, Jonsson, Cathrine, and Nobili, FLAVIO MARIANO
- Subjects
PET ,Statistical Analysis ,mild cognitive impairment ,normal aging ,Neurology ,Alzheimer s Disease ,FDG-PET ,Independent Component Analysis - Published
- 2017
23. Neuroimaging findings and clinical trajectories of Lewy body disease in patients with MCI.
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Massa, Federico, Arnaldi, Dario, De Cesari, Francesca, Girtler, Nicola, Brugnolo, Andrea, Grazzini, Matteo, Bauckneht, Matteo, Meli, Riccardo, Morbelli, Silvia, Pardini, Matteo, Sambuceti, Gianmario, De Carli, Fabrizio, Tiraboschi, Pietro, and Nobili, Flavio
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LEWY body dementia , *PARKINSON'S disease , *MILD cognitive impairment , *MOVEMENT disorders , *DEMENTIA risk factors - Abstract
Abstract Elderly patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) may develop a Lewy body disease; their neuroimaging features at presentation are largely unknown. We present an intriguing group of 13 patients with MCI preceding (2.9 ± 1.9 years) parkinsonism (MCI-P), and eventually dementia 4.6 ± 1.6 years later (6 patients), whereas 7 patients remained dementia free after 4.7 ± 2.7 years. Neuropsychological tests, dopamine transporter (DAT) single photon emission computed tomography, and 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography were compared with healthy controls and with cognitively normal patients with Parkinson's disease (PD-MOT). Compared to controls, MCI-P but not PD-MOT showed significant posterior temporo-parieto-occipital hypometabolism. Basal ganglia DAT uptake was similar between MCI-P and PD-MOT. Patients who converted to dementia were older, tended to have higher movement disorder society-unified Parkinson's disease rating scale scores and developed at least another clinical core feature fulfilling the criteria for probable dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB). Concurrent impairment of Corsi span and semantic verbal fluency, or of temporal lobe hypometabolism at baseline and reduced putamen-to-caudate ratio on DAT-SPECT at parkinsonism onset, both predicted (p < 0.001) the evolution to dementia. The constructs of Park cognitive subtype and prodromal Lewy body dementia partially overlap; functional imaging and neuropsychology may help in characterizing the patients and in tracking the risk toward dementia. Highlights • A PD patient may present cognitive complaints before the motor symptoms arise. • The constructs of prodromal DLB and PARK-cognitive subtype overlap. • Early findings of neurodegeneration are risk factors for dementia in synucleinopathies. • 'Prodromal' LBD is a reasonable label in very early stages of synucleinopathies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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24. Risk and predictors of dementia and parkinsonism in idiopathic REM sleep behaviour disorder: a multicentre study.
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Postuma, Ronald B, Iranzo, Alex, Hu, Michele, Högl, Birgit, Boeve, Bradley F, Manni, Raffaele, Oertel, Wolfgang H, Arnulf, Isabelle, Ferini-Strambi, Luigi, Puligheddu, Monica, Antelmi, Elena, Cock, Valerie Cochen De, Arnaldi, Dario, Mollenhauer, Brit, Videnovic, Aleksandar, Sonka, Karel, Jung, Ki-Young, Kunz, Dieter, Dauvilliers, Yves, and Provini, Federica
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BEHAVIOR disorders ,LEWY body dementia ,RESTLESS legs syndrome ,MULTIPLE system atrophy ,SLEEP disorders ,MILD cognitive impairment ,SLEEP - Abstract
Idiopathic REM sleep behaviour disorder (iRBD) is a powerful early sign of Parkinson's disease, dementia with Lewy bodies, and multiple system atrophy. This provides an unprecedented opportunity to directly observe prodromal neurodegenerative states, and potentially intervene with neuroprotective therapy. For future neuroprotective trials, it is essential to accurately estimate phenoconversion rate and identify potential predictors of phenoconversion. This study assessed the neurodegenerative disease risk and predictors of neurodegeneration in a large multicentre cohort of iRBD. We combined prospective follow-up data from 24 centres of the International RBD Study Group. At baseline, patients with polysomnographically-confirmed iRBD without parkinsonism or dementia underwent sleep, motor, cognitive, autonomic and special sensory testing. Patients were then prospectively followed, during which risk of dementia and parkinsonsim were assessed. The risk of dementia and parkinsonism was estimated with Kaplan-Meier analysis. Predictors of phenoconversion were assessed with Cox proportional hazards analysis, adjusting for age, sex, and centre. Sample size estimates for disease-modifying trials were calculated using a time-to-event analysis. Overall, 1280 patients were recruited. The average age was 66.3 ± 8.4 and 82.5% were male. Average follow-up was 4.6 years (range = 1-19 years). The overall conversion rate from iRBD to an overt neurodegenerative syndrome was 6.3% per year, with 73.5% converting after 12-year follow-up. The rate of phenoconversion was significantly increased with abnormal quantitative motor testing [hazard ratio (HR) = 3.16], objective motor examination (HR = 3.03), olfactory deficit (HR = 2.62), mild cognitive impairment (HR = 1.91-2.37), erectile dysfunction (HR = 2.13), motor symptoms (HR = 2.11), an abnormal DAT scan (HR = 1.98), colour vision abnormalities (HR = 1.69), constipation (HR = 1.67), REM atonia loss (HR = 1.54), and age (HR = 1.54). There was no significant predictive value of sex, daytime somnolence, insomnia, restless legs syndrome, sleep apnoea, urinary dysfunction, orthostatic symptoms, depression, anxiety, or hyperechogenicity on substantia nigra ultrasound. Among predictive markers, only cognitive variables were different at baseline between those converting to primary dementia versus parkinsonism. Sample size estimates for definitive neuroprotective trials ranged from 142 to 366 patients per arm. This large multicentre study documents the high phenoconversion rate from iRBD to an overt neurodegenerative syndrome. Our findings provide estimates of the relative predictive value of prodromal markers, which can be used to stratify patients for neuroprotective trials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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25. The Alzheimer’s disease metabolic brain pattern in mild cognitive impairment.
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Meles, Sanne K., Pagani, Marco, Arnaldi, Dario, De Carli, Fabrizio, Dessi, Barbara, Morbelli, Silvia, Sambuceti, Gianmario, Jonsson, Cathrine, Leenders, Klaus L., and Nobili, Flavio
- Abstract
We investigated the expression of the Alzheimer’s disease-related metabolic brain pattern (ADRP) in
18 F-FDG-PET scans of 44 controls, 27 patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) who did not convert to Alzheimer’s disease (AD) after five or more years of clinical follow-up, 95 MCI patients who did develop AD dementia on clinical follow-up, and 55 patients with mild-to-moderate AD. The ADRP showed good sensitivity (84%) and specificity (86%) for MCI-converters when compared to controls, but limited specificity when compared to MCI non-converters (66%). Assessment of18 F-FDG-PET scans on a case-by-case basis using the ADRP may be useful for quantifying disease progression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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26. Brain F-DOPA PET and cognition in de novo Parkinson's disease.
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Picco, Agnese, Morbelli, Silvia, Piccardo, Arnoldo, Arnaldi, Dario, Girtler, Nicola, Brugnolo, Andrea, Bossert, Irene, Marinelli, Lucio, Castaldi, Antonio, Carli, Fabrizio, Campus, Claudio, Abbruzzese, Giovanni, and Nobili, Flavio
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PARKINSON'S disease ,POSITRON emission tomography ,MILD cognitive impairment ,CINGULATE cortex ,SHORT-term memory ,FACTOR analysis ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Purpose: The role of mesocortical dopaminergic pathways in the cognitive function of patients with early Parkinson's disease (PD) needs to be further clarified. Methods: The study groups comprised 15 drug-naive patients with de novo PD and 10 patients with essential tremor (controls) who underwent F-DOPA PET (static acquisition, normalization on mean cerebellar counts) and an extended neuropsychological test battery. Factor analysis with varimax rotation was applied to the neuropsychological test scores, to yield five factors from 16 original scores, which explained 82 % of the total variance. Correlations between cognitive factors and F-DOPA uptake were assessed with SPM8, taking age and gender as nuisance variables. Results: F-DOPA uptake was significantly lower in PD patients than in controls in the bilateral striatum, mainly in the more affected (right) hemisphere, and in a small right temporal region. Significant positive correlations were found only in PD patients between the executive factor and F-DOPA uptake in the bilateral anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and the middle frontal gyrus, between the verbal fluency factor and F-DOPA uptake in left BA 46 and the bilateral striatum, and between the visuospatial factor and F-DOPA uptake in the left ACC and bilateral striatum. No correlations were found between F-DOPA uptake and either the verbal memory factor or the abstraction-working memory factor. Conclusion: These data clarify the role of the mesocortical dopaminergic pathways in cognitive function in early PD, highlighting the medial frontal lobe, anterior cingulate, and left BA 46 as the main sites of cortical correlation with executive and language functions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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27. Visual Versus Semi-Quantitative Analysis of 18F-FDG-PET in Amnestic MCI: An European Alzheimer's Disease Consortium (EADC) Project.
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Morbelli, Silvia, Brugnolo, Andrea, Bossert, Irene, Buschiazzo, Ambra, Frisoni, Giovanni B., Galluzzi, Samantha, van Berckel, Bart N.M., Ossenkoppele, Rik, Perneczky, Robert, Drzezga, Alexander, Didic, Mira, Guedj, Eric, Sambuceti, Gianmario, Bottoni, Gianluca, Arnaldi, Dario, Picco, Agnese, De Carli, Fabrizio, Pagani, Marco, and Nobili, Flavio
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ALZHEIMER'S disease research ,AMNESTIC mild cognitive impairment ,COGNITION disorders research ,MILD cognitive impairment ,DEMENTIA research ,NEUROBEHAVIORAL disorders - Abstract
We aimed to investigate the accuracy of FDG-PET to detect the Alzheimer's disease (AD) brain glucose hypometabolic pattern in 142 patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) and 109 healthy controls. aMCI patients were followed for at least two years or until conversion to dementia. Images were evaluated by means of visual read by either moderately-skilled or expert readers, and by means of a summary metric of AD-like hypometabolism (PALZ score). Seventy-seven patients converted to AD-dementia after 28.6 ± 19.3 months of follow-up. Expert reading was the most accurate tool to detect these MCI converters from healthy controls (sensitivity 89.6%, specificity 89.0%, accuracy 89.2%) while two moderately-skilled readers were less (p < 0.05) specific (sensitivity 85.7%, specificity 79.8%, accuracy 82.3%) and PALZ score was less (p < 0.001) sensitive (sensitivity 62.3%, specificity 91.7%, accuracy 79.6%). Among the remaining 67 aMCI patients, 50 were confirmed as aMCI after an average of 42.3 months, 12 developed other dementia, and 3 reverted to normalcy. In 30/50 persistent MCI patients, the expert recognized the AD hypometabolic pattern. In 13/50 aMCI, both the expert and PALZ score were negative while in 7/50, only the PALZ score was positive due to sparse hypometabolic clusters mainly in frontal lobes. Visual FDG-PET reads by an expert is the most accurate method but an automated, validated system may be particularly helpful to moderately-skilled readers because of high specificity, and should be mandatory when even a moderately-skilled reader is unavailable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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28. Metabolic Correlates of Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test in Elderly Subjects with Memory Complaints.
- Author
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Brugnolo, Andrea, Morbelli, Silvia, Arnaldi, Dario, De Carli, Fabrizio, Accardo, Jennifer, Bossert, Irene, Dessi, Barbara, Famà, Francesco, Ferrara, Michela, Girtler, Nicola, Picco, Agnese, Rodriguez, Guido, Sambuceti, Gianmario, and Nobili, Flavio
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REY Auditory Verbal Learning Test ,HEALTH of older people ,MEMORY ,MILD cognitive impairment ,COGNITION disorders ,DIAGNOSTIC imaging ,BIOCHEMISTRY - Abstract
We evaluated the brain metabolic correlates of main indexes of a widely used word list learning test, the Rey Auditory Verbal Memory Test (RAVLT), in a group of elderly subjects with memory complaints. Fifty-four subjects (age: 72.02 ± 7.45; Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score: 28.9 ± 1.24) presenting at a memory clinic complaining of memory deficit, but not demented, and thirty controls (age: 71.87 ± 7.08; MMSE score: 29.1 ± 1.1) were included. Subjects with memory complaints included both patients with (amnestic mild cognitive impairment, aMCI) and without (subjective memory complaints, SMC) impairment on memory tests. All subjects underwent 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET), analyzed with statistical parametric. Patients with aMCI but not those with SMC showed the expected posterior cingulate-precuneus and parietal hypometabolism as compared to controls. Correlation was determined for between four indexes of the RAVLT and brain metabolism. The results show a significant correlation between the delayed recall score and metabolism in posterior cingulate gyrus of both hemispheres and in left precuneus, as well as between a score of long-term percent retention and metabolism in left posterior cingulate gyrus, precuneus, and orbitofrontal areas. These correlations survived correction for age, education, and MMSE score. No correlation was found between immediate or total recall scores and glucose metabolism. These data show the relevant role of posterior cingulate-precuneus and orbitofrontal cortices in retention and retrieval of de-contextualized verbal memory material in a group of elderly subjects with memory complaints and shed light on the topography of synaptic dysfunction in these subjects, overlapping that found in the earliest stages of Alzheimer-type neurodegeneration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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29. Seizures Can Precede Cognitive Symptoms in Late-Onset Alzheimer's Disease.
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Picco, Agnese, Archetti, Silvana, Ferrara, Michela, Arnaldi, Dario, Piccini, Alessandra, Serrati, Carlo, di Lorenzo, Diego, Morbelli, Silvia, and Nobili, Flavio
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ALZHEIMER'S disease ,MILD cognitive impairment ,AMYLOIDOSIS ,APOLIPOPROTEIN E ,NEURONS ,BIOMARKERS ,PRESENILINS - Abstract
This study describes late-onset Alzheimer's disease (LOAD) in the mild cognitive impairment (MCI) stage, debuting with seizures in a 72 year-old woman. Prodromal AD was consistently diagnosed with four among amyloidosis and neurodegeneration biomarkers about 1 year after onset of seizures. Genetic assessment demonstrated apolipoprotein E ℇ2/ℇ3 genotype and three intronic single nucleotide substitutions, two in presenilin 1 and one in amyloid-β protein precursor genes. This case of seizures at onset of LOAD with severe signs of brain amyloidosis and neurodegeneration but with just MCI leads to a re-appraisal of the intriguing relationship between AD pathology and neuron excitability in humans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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30. Brain Resources: How Semantic Cueing Works in Mild Cognitive Impairment due to Alzheimer's Disease (MCI-AD).
- Author
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Brugnolo, Andrea, Girtler, Nicola, Doglione, Elisa, Orso, Beatrice, Massa, Federico, Donegani, Maria Isabella, Bauckneht, Matteo, Morbelli, Silvia, Arnaldi, Dario, Nobili, Flavio, and Pardini, Matteo
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MILD cognitive impairment ,NEUROLINGUISTICS ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,BRAIN metabolism ,POSITRON emission tomography ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests - Abstract
Semantic cues in the Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test (FCRST) play a key role in the neuropsychological diagnosis of Amnesic Mild Cognitive Impairment due to Alzheimer's Disease (MCI-AD); however, the neural bases of their impact of recall abilities are only partially understood. Here, we thus decided to investigate the relationships between brain metabolism and the FCSRT Index of Sensitivity of Cueing (ISC) in patients with MCI-AD and in healthy controls (HC). Materials: Thirty MCI-AD patients (age: 74.7 ± 5.7 years; education: 9.6 ± 4.6 years, MMSE score: 24.8 ± 3.3, 23 females) and seventeen HC (age: 66.5 ± 11.1 years; education: 11.53 ± 4.2 years, MMSE score: 28.4 ± 1.14, 10 females) who underwent neuropsychological evaluation and brain F-18 fluorodeoxyglucose Positron Emission Tomography (FDG-PET) were included in the study. Results: ISC was able to differentiate HC from MCI-AD subjects as shown by a ROC analysis (AUC of 0.978, effect size Hedges's g = 2.89). MCI-AD subjects showed significant hypometabolism in posterior cortices, including bilateral inferior Parietal Lobule and Precuneus and Middle Temporal gyrus in the left hemisphere (VOI-1) compared to HC. ISC was positively correlated with brain metabolism in a single cluster (VOI-2) spanning the left prefrontal cortex (superior frontal gyrus) and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) in the patient group (R
2 = 0.526, p < 0.001), but not in HC. Mean uptake values of VOI-2 did not differ between HC and MCI-AD. The structural connectivity analysis showed that VOI-2 is connected with the temporal pole, the cingulate gyrus and the posterior temporal cortices in the left hemisphere. Conclusion: In MCI-AD, the relative preservation of frontal cortex metabolic levels and their correlation with the ISC suggest that the left frontal cortices play a significant role in maintaining a relatively good memory performance despite the presence of posterior hypometabolism in MCI-AD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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31. Resting state electroencephalographic alpha rhythms are sensitive to Alzheimer's disease mild cognitive impairment progression at a 6-month follow-up.
- Author
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Babiloni, Claudio, Jakhar, Dharmendra, Tucci, Federico, Del Percio, Claudio, Lopez, Susanna, Soricelli, Andrea, Salvatore, Marco, Ferri, Raffaele, Catania, Valentina, Massa, Federico, Arnaldi, Dario, Famà, Francesco, Güntekin, Bahar, Yener, Görsev, Stocchi, Fabrizio, Vacca, Laura, Marizzoni, Moira, Giubilei, Franco, Yıldırım, Ebru, and Hanoğlu, Lutfu
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ALPHA rhythm , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *MILD cognitive impairment , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *MAGNETIC induction tomography - Abstract
Are posterior resting-state electroencephalographic (rsEEG) alpha rhythms sensitive to the Alzheimer's disease mild cognitive impairment (ADMCI) progression at a 6-month follow-up? Clinical, cerebrospinal, neuroimaging, and rsEEG datasets in 52 ADMCI and 60 Healthy old seniors (equivalent groups for demographic features) were available from an international archive (www.pdwaves.eu). The ADMCI patients were arbitrarily divided into two groups: REACTIVE and UNREACTIVE, based on the reduction (reactivity) in the posterior rsEEG alpha eLORETA source activities from the eyes-closed to eyes-open condition at ≥ −10% and −10%, respectively. 75% of the ADMCI patients were REACTIVE. Compared to the UNREACTIVE group, the REACTIVE group showed (1) less abnormal posterior rsEEG source activity during the eyes-closed condition and (2) a decrease in that activity at the 6-month follow-up. These effects could not be explained by neuroimaging and neuropsychological biomarkers of AD. Such a biomarker might reflect abnormalities in cortical arousal in quiet wakefulness to be used for clinical studies in ADMCI patients using 6-month follow-ups. • Low EEG alpha rhythms in Alzheimer's disease mild cognitive impairment patients. • EEG alpha rhythms decreased (reacted) to eye-opening in 70% of them. • EEG alpha rhythms decreased in those "reactive" patients at 6-month follow-up. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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32. Radionuclide brain imaging correlates of cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease (PD)
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Nobili, Flavio, Morbelli, Silvia, Arnaldi, Dario, Ferrara, Michela, Campus, Claudio, Brugnolo, Andrea, Mazzei, Debora, Mehrdad, Naseri, Sambuceti, Gianmario, and Rodriguez, Guido
- Subjects
- *
PARKINSON'S disease , *BRAIN imaging , *MILD cognitive impairment , *RADIONUCLIDE imaging , *LEWY body dementia , *POSITRON emission tomography , *SINGLE-photon emission computed tomography - Abstract
Abstract: A subtle cognitive impairment can be detected early in the course of Parkinson''s disease (PD). Executive, memory and visuospatial functions are specifically affected, but the underlying pathophysiological basis is not well elucidated yet and may be heterogeneous. The recent identification of a PD-related cognitive metabolic pattern (PDCP), including hypometabolism in associative frontal, parietal and posterior limbic structures, has integrated the classical notion of a striato-frontal syndrome at the basis of cognitive dys-function. Recent evidence suggests that whilst executive dys-function is seen in virtually all PD patients, visuospatial and memory impairment may share a higher risk for the subsequent development of dementia. By means of perfusion SPECT and [18F]FDG-PET, cortical dys-function may be highlighted since the early stages, it is more evident in PD patients with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI), and reaches the maximum in PD dementia (PDD). Posterior temporo–parieto–occipital dys-function in associative and limbic cortex, closely resembling that found in Alzheimer''s disease patients, is found in PDD, with a more severe occipital hypometabolism and a relatively milder hypometabolism in medial temporal lobe structures. Furthermore, deficit of acetylcholinesterase (AchE) can be found by means of [11C]MP4A-PET already in early stage of PD, especially in posterior regions, then becoming more severe in PDD and in dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB). Administration of AchE inhibitors to PDD patients increased brain metabolism in bilateral frontal and left parietal regions, and left posterior cingulate. Finally, the recent availability of radiopharmaceuticals able to disclose amyloid brain deposition has allowed to demonstrate amyloid load in a part of patients with PDD, possibly due to diffuse rather than neuritic plaques. Brain PET and SPECT have strongly contributed to the understanding of the pathophysiology of cognitive impairment in PD and may serve as probes to monitor the effects of therapeutic interventions. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
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33. The role of anterior prefrontal cortex in prospective memory: an exploratory FDG-PET study in early Alzheimer's disease.
- Author
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Massa, Federico, Grisanti, Stefano, Brugnolo, Andrea, Doglione, Elisa, Orso, Beatrice, Morbelli, Silvia, Bauckneht, Matteo, Origone, Paola, Filippi, Laura, Arnaldi, Dario, De Carli, Fabrizio, Pardini, Matteo, Pagani, Marco, Nobili, Flavio, and Girtler, Nicola
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PREFRONTAL cortex , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *POSITRON emission tomography , *MILD cognitive impairment , *PROSPECTIVE memory ,BRAIN metabolism - Abstract
From previous studies in healthy volunteers the prefrontal regions are deeply involved in prospective memory (PM), although little is known about the functional neural basis of PM in prodromal Alzheimer's disease (AD). To this end, we retrospectively recruited 18 patients with mild cognitive impairment caused by AD and 23 matched healthy control subjects who had undergone 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography and the PM-specific paradigm test. Brain metabolism was correlated with the PM score in the 2 groups separately to find those brain areas correlated with PM performance, which were then used as a hub for an inter-regional metabolic connectivity analyses (inter-regional correlation analysis). Of note, in mild cognitive impairment caused by AD, but not in healthy control subjects, PM score positively correlated with metabolic levels in the right anterior prefrontal cortex (middle and inferior frontal gyri), which disclosed a loss of interhemispheric connectivity in the inter-regional correlation analysis. According to our findings, the functioning of the right anterior prefrontal cortex and its interhemispheric metabolic connectivity is crucial in early AD to sustain PM performance, which deteriorates along with progressive metabolic failure of the interconnected areas. • Prospective memory (PM) is frequently impaired in early Alzheimer's disease (AD). • In healthy subjects the anterior prefrontal cortex (aPFC) has a crucial role in PM. • Metabolism in right aPFC positively correlates with PM performance also in MCI-AD. • The right aPFC acts as a point of resilience of the network sustaining PM in MCI-AD. • PM impairment may be underpinned by a severe connectivity failure in early AD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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34. Utility of quantitative EEG in early Lewy body disease.
- Author
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Massa, Federico, Meli, Riccardo, Grazzini, Matteo, Famà, Francesco, De Carli, Fabrizio, Filippi, Laura, Arnaldi, Dario, Pardini, Matteo, Morbelli, Silvia, and Nobili, Flavio
- Subjects
- *
MILD cognitive impairment , *COGNITION disorders , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *SYMPTOMS , *RESEARCH , *LEWY body dementia , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CEREBRAL cortex , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Introduction: The reduction of background activity and the increase of low-frequency powers on electroencephalogram (EEG) correlate with cognitive impairment and have been suggested to be underpinned by cholinergic deficit. We aimed to investigate the ratio between α and θ band power (α/θ ratio), as a synoptic index of quantitative EEG (qEEG) slowing-down, in a peculiar group of patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) due to an early-stage Lewy body disease (MCI-LBD), as compared to de novo PD patients without cognitive impairment (PD-MOT), to patients with MCI due to Alzheimer's disease (MCI-AD), and to healthy controls (HC).Methods: Twelve patients with MCI-LBD (8 males; mean age 74.8 ± 3.6), 11 PD-MOT, 11 MCI-AD and 24 HC subjects undergoing qEEG were matched for gender, age, and education. Following logarithmic transformation, the α/θ ratio was compared among groups and brain regions by repeated measures ANOVA, also exploring group*regions interactions.Results: A significant effect of group (p = 0.0003), regions (p = 0.0001), and group*regions interaction (p = 0.0001) on the α/θ ratio was observed. At post-hoc analysis, α/θ ratio was significantly lower in MCI-LBD (p = 0.001) and in PD-MOT (p = 0.02) compared to HC, and in MCI-LBD than MCI-AD (p = 0.05). No significant differences were found between MCI-AD and HC, as well as between MCI-LBD and PD-MOT.Conclusion: The α/θ power ratio as a synoptic index of EEG background slowing-down could be a simple and easy-to-use qEEG index which might indirectly mirror a cholinergic failure, useful to pick-up those MCI patients at higher risk of developing a Lewy-body disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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35. Abnormalities of functional cortical source connectivity of resting-state electroencephalographic alpha rhythms are similar in patients with mild cognitive impairment due to Alzheimer's and Lewy body diseases.
- Author
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Babiloni, Claudio, Del Percio, Claudio, Pascarelli, Maria Teresa, Lizio, Roberta, Noce, Giuseppe, Lopez, Susanna, Rizzo, Marco, Ferri, Raffaele, Soricelli, Andrea, Nobili, Flavio, Arnaldi, Dario, Famà, Francesco, Orzi, Francesco, Buttinelli, Carla, Giubilei, Franco, Salvetti, Marco, Cipollini, Virginia, Franciotti, Raffaella, Onofrj, Marco, and Stirpe, Paola
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- *
LEWY body dementia , *MILD cognitive impairment , *ALPHA rhythm , *RECEIVER operating characteristic curves , *ALZHEIMER'S disease - Abstract
Previous evidence has shown different resting-state eyes-closed electroencephalographic delta (<4 Hz) and alpha (8–10.5 Hz) source connectivity in subjects with dementia due to Alzheimer's (ADD) and Lewy body (DLB) diseases. The present study tested if the same differences may be observed in the prodromal stages of mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Here, clinical and resting-state eyes-closed electroencephalographic data in age-, gender-, and education-matched 30 ADMCI, 23 DLBMCI, and 30 healthy elderly (Nold) subjects were available in our international archive. Mini-Mental State Evaluation (MMSE) score was matched in the ADMCI and DLBMCI groups. The eLORETA freeware estimated delta and alpha source connectivity by the tool called lagged linear connectivity (LLC). Area under receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROCC) indexed the classification accuracy among individuals. Results showed that widespread interhemispheric and intrahemispheric LLC solutions in alpha sources were abnormally lower in both MCI groups compared with the Nold group, but with no differences were found between the 2 MCI groups. AUROCCs of LLC solutions in alpha sources exhibited significant accuracies (0.72–0.75) in the discrimination of Nold versus ADMCI-DLBMCI individuals, but not between the 2 MCI groups. These findings disclose similar abnormalities in ADMCI and DLBMCI patients as revealed by alpha source connectivity. It can be speculated that source connectivity mostly reflects common cholinergic impairment in prodromal state of both AD and DLB, before a substantial dopaminergic derangement in the dementia stage of DLB. • We evaluated the abnormalities in functional cortical connectivity computed in rsEEG sources in subjects with Mild Cognitive Impairment due to Alzheimer's and Lewy Body disease. • At the group level, EEG markers of functional cortical connectivity were abnormally lower in in Alzheimer's Disease (ADD) and Lewy Body Disease (DLB) patients compared to healthy elderly subjects (Nold). • At the group level, EEG markers of functional cortical connectivity were similar between in ADD and DLB patients compared to Nold subjects. • At the individual level, EEG marker of functional cortical connectivity exhibited better classification accuracies for the discrimination of ADD versus Nold, and DLB versus Nold, but not between ADD and DLB. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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36. Levodopa may affect cortical excitability in Parkinson's disease patients with cognitive deficits as revealed by reduced activity of cortical sources of resting state electroencephalographic rhythms.
- Author
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Babiloni, Claudio, Del Percio, Claudio, Lizio, Roberta, Noce, Giuseppe, Lopez, Susanna, Soricelli, Andrea, Ferri, Raffaele, Pascarelli, Maria Teresa, Catania, Valentina, Nobili, Flavio, Arnaldi, Dario, Famà, Francesco, Orzi, Francesco, Buttinelli, Carla, Giubilei, Franco, Bonanni, Laura, Franciotti, Raffaella, Onofrj, Marco, Stirpe, Paola, and Fuhr, Peter
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PARKINSON'S disease , *DOPA , *COGNITION disorders , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *MILD cognitive impairment - Abstract
Abstract We hypothesized that dopamine neuromodulation might affect cortical excitability in Parkinson's disease (PD) patients set in quiet wakefulness, as revealed by resting state eyes-closed electroencephalographic (rsEEG) rhythms at alpha frequencies (8–12 Hz). Clinical and rsEEG rhythms in PD with dementia (N = 35), PD with mild cognitive impairment (N = 50), PD with normal cognition (N = 35), and normal (N = 50) older adults were available from an international archive. Cortical rsEEG sources were estimated by exact low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography. Compared with the normal older group, the PD groups showed reduced occipital alpha sources and increased widespread delta (<4 Hz) sources. Widespread frontal and temporal alpha sources exhibited an increase in PD with dementia compared with PD with mild cognitive impairment and PD with normal cognition groups, as function of dopamine depletion severity, typically greater in the former than the latter groups. A daily dose of levodopa induced a widespread reduction in cortical delta and alpha sources in a subgroup of 13 PD patients under standard chronic dopaminergic regimen. In PD patients in quiet wakefulness, alpha cortical source activations may reflect an excitatory effect of dopamine neuromodulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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37. Functional cortical source connectivity of resting state electroencephalographic alpha rhythms shows similar abnormalities in patients with mild cognitive impairment due to Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases.
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Babiloni, Claudio, Del Percio, Claudio, Lizio, Roberta, Noce, Giuseppe, Lopez, Susanna, Soricelli, Andrea, Ferri, Raffaele, Pascarelli, Maria Teresa, Catania, Valentina, Nobili, Flavio, Arnaldi, Dario, Famà, Francesco, Orzi, Francesco, Buttinelli, Carla, Giubilei, Franco, Bonanni, Laura, Franciotti, Raffaella, Onofrj, Marco, Stirpe, Paola, and Fuhr, Peter
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ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *ALPHA rhythm , *MILD cognitive impairment , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *PARKINSON'S disease , *PATIENTS - Abstract
Objective This study tested the hypothesis that markers of functional cortical source connectivity of resting state eyes-closed electroencephalographic (rsEEG) rhythms may be abnormal in subjects with mild cognitive impairment due to Alzheimer’s (ADMCI) and Parkinson’s (PDMCI) diseases compared to healthy elderly subjects (Nold). Methods rsEEG data had been collected in ADMCI, PDMCI, and Nold subjects (N = 75 for any group). eLORETA freeware estimated functional lagged linear connectivity (LLC) from rsEEG cortical sources. Area under receiver operating characteristic (AUROC) curve indexed the accuracy in the classification of Nold and MCI individuals. Results Posterior interhemispheric and widespread intrahemispheric alpha LLC solutions were abnormally lower in both MCI groups compared to the Nold group. At the individual level, AUROC curves of LLC solutions in posterior alpha sources exhibited moderate accuracies (0.70–0.72) in the discrimination of Nold vs. ADMCI-PDMCI individuals. No differences in the LLC solutions were found between the two MCI groups. Conclusions These findings unveil similar abnormalities in functional cortical connectivity estimated in widespread alpha sources in ADMCI and PDMCI. This was true at both group and individual levels. Significance The similar abnormality of alpha source connectivity in ADMCI and PDMCI subjects might reflect common cholinergic impairment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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38. Predicting the transition from normal aging to Alzheimer's disease: A statistical mechanistic evaluation of FDG-PET data.
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Pagani, Marco, Giuliani, Alessandro, Öberg, Johanna, Chincarini, Andrea, Morbelli, Silvia, Brugnolo, Andrea, Arnaldi, Dario, Picco, Agnese, Bauckneht, Matteo, Buschiazzo, Ambra, Sambuceti, Gianmario, and Nobili, Flavio
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ALZHEIMER'S disease diagnosis , *BRAIN tomography , *AGING , *BRAIN , *FLUORODEOXYGLUCOSE F18 , *BRAIN imaging , *PRINCIPAL components analysis , *QUANTITATIVE research - Abstract
The assessment of the degree of order of brain metabolism by means of a statistical mechanistic approach applied to FDG-PET, allowed us to characterize healthy subjects as well as patients with mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's Disease (AD). The intensity signals from 24 volumes of interest were submitted to principal component analysis (PCA) giving rise to a major first principal component whose eigenvalue was a reliable cumulative index of order. This index linearly decreased from 77 to 44% going from normal aging to AD patients with intermediate conditions between these values ( r = 0.96, p < 0.001). Bootstrap analysis confirmed the statistical significance of the results. The progressive detachment of different brain regions from the first component was assessed, allowing for a purely data driven reconstruction of already known maximally affected areas. We demonstrated for the first time the reliability of a single global index of order in discriminating groups of cognitively impaired patients with different clinical outcome. The second relevant finding was the identification of clusters of regions relevant to AD pathology progressively separating from the first principal component through different stages of cognitive impairment, including patients cognitively impaired but not converted to AD. This paved the way to the quantitative assessment of the functional networking status in individual patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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39. Evaluation of iron overload in nigrosome 1 via quantitative susceptibility mapping as a progression biomarker in prodromal stages of synucleinopathies.
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Lancione, Marta, Donatelli, Graziella, Del Prete, Eleonora, Campese, Nicole, Frosini, Daniela, Cencini, Matteo, Costagli, Mauro, Biagi, Laura, Lucchi, Giacomo, Tosetti, Michela, Godani, Massimiliano, Arnaldi, Dario, Terzaghi, Michele, Provini, Federica, Pacchetti, Claudio, Cortelli, Pietro, Bonanni, Enrica, Ceravolo, Roberto, and Cosottini, Mirco
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IRON overload , *IRON , *PARKINSON'S disease , *MILD cognitive impairment , *SUBSTANTIA nigra , *DISEASE duration , *BODY dysmorphic disorder , *MOVEMENT disorders - Abstract
• We evaluated iron deposition in N1 in HC and patients with early PD (ePD) and iRBD. • N1 aspect was pathological in T2*-w images in 45% of iRBD patients and in most ePD. • ePD N1 χ was higher than iRBD and HC χ but had no correlation with disease duration. • N1 χ in iRBD was similar to HC but increased with disease duration. • N1 χ may be a presymptomatic biomarker for neurodegeneration in prodromal PD. Idiopathic rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (iRBD) is a prodromal stage of α-synucleinopathies, such as Parkinson's disease (PD), which are characterized by the loss of dopaminergic neurons in substantia nigra, associated with abnormal iron load. The assessment of presymptomatic biomarkers predicting the onset of neurodegenerative disorders is critical for monitoring early signs, screening patients for neuroprotective clinical trials and understanding the causal relationship between iron accumulation processes and disease development. Here, we used Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping (QSM) and 7T MRI to quantify iron deposition in Nigrosome 1 (N1) in early PD (ePD) patients, iRBD patients and healthy controls and investigated group differences and correlation with disease progression. We evaluated the radiological appearance of N1 and analyzed its iron content in 35 ePD, 30 iRBD patients and 14 healthy controls via T2*-weighted sequences and susceptibility (χ) maps. N1 regions of interest (ROIs) were manually drawn on control subjects and warped onto a study-specific template to obtain probabilistic N1 ROIs. For each subject the N1 with the highest mean χ was considered for statistical analysis. The appearance of N1 was rated pathological in 45% of iRBD patients. ePD patients showed increased N1 χ compared to iRBD patients and HC but no correlation with disease duration, indicating that iron load remains stable during the early stages of disease progression. Although no difference was reported in iron content between iRBD and HC, N1 χ in the iRBD group increases as the disease evolves. QSM can reveal temporal changes in N1 iron content and its quantification may represent a valuable presymptomatic biomarker to assess neurodegeneration in the prodromal stages of PD. [Display omitted]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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40. Neuropsychological and brain metabolism characteristics of mild cognitive impairment in prodromal Alzheimer's disease and in prodromal synucleinopathy.
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Mattioli, Pietro, Donniaquio, Andrea, Pardini, Matteo, Famà, Francesco, Giorgetti, Laura, Girtler, Nicola, Brugnolo, Andrea, Orso, Beatrice, Doglione, Elisa, Biassoni, Erica, Grisanti, Stefano, Massa, Federico, Bauckneht, Matteo, Morbelli, Silvia, Nobili, Flavio, and Arnaldi, Dario
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MILD cognitive impairment , *ALZHEIMER'S disease ,BRAIN metabolism - Published
- 2021
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41. Corrigendum to "Functional cortical source connectivity of resting state electroencephalographic alpha rhythms shows similar abnormalities in patients with mild cognitive impairment due to Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases" [Clin. Neurophysiol. 129 (2018) 766–782]
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Babiloni, Claudio, Percio, Claudio Del, Lizio, Roberta, Noce, Giuseppe, Lopez, Susanna, Soricelli, Andrea, Ferri, Raffaele, Pascarelli, Maria Teresa, Catania, Valentina, Nobili, Flavio, Arnaldi, Dario, Famà, Francesco, Orzi, Francesco, Buttinelli, Carla, Giubilei, Franco, Bonanni, Laura, Franciotti, Raffaella, Onofrj, Marco, Stirpe, Paola, and Fuhr, Peter
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ALPHA rhythm , *MILD cognitive impairment , *PARKINSON'S disease , *ABNORMALITIES in animals - Published
- 2019
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