378 results on '"DE Tanti A"'
Search Results
52. Rehabilitation in a rare case of coffin-siris syndrome with major cognitive and behavioural disorders
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Katia De Gaetano, Antonio De Tanti, Paola Abbati, Sara Bosetti, Donatella Saviola, Vivian Igharo, and Romina Galvani
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Male ,030506 rehabilitation ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Micrognathism ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Disease ,Scoliosis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Intellectual Disability ,medicine ,Humans ,Abnormalities, Multiple ,Cognitive rehabilitation therapy ,Agenesis of the corpus callosum ,Coffin–Siris syndrome ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,DNA Helicases ,Nuclear Proteins ,medicine.disease ,Hypotonia ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,Face ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Hand Deformities, Congenital ,Neck ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Coffin-Siris syndrome is a rare genetic disease with heterozygous variants in the ARID1A, ARID1B, ARID2, DPF2, SMARCA4, SMARCB1, SMARCE1 or SOX11 genes. It may manifest with somatic anomalies, deafness, urogenital malformations, recurrent infections, mental retardation, speech deficit, agenesis of the corpus callosum, convulsions, hypotonia, developmental delay, and scoliosis. CASE REPORT: A 14-year-old boy with Coffin-Siris syndrome due to variants in the ARID1A gene was referred to the clinic. His rehabilitation over a 9-year period was described. The problem of assessment and the approach to rehabilitation was discussed, enabling a progressive remodelling of the cognitive-behavioural disorders that most hindered the possibility of his acquiring new skills and achieving social and family integration. CLINICAL REHABILITATION: A protracted, customised, multiprofessional rehabilitation approach, centred on realistic functional objectives, implemented with the direct involvement of the family and school, was the only way to achieve the maximum independence and social and family integration permitted by his residual disability.
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- 2021
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53. Predicting Outcome of Acquired Brain Injury by the Evolution of Paroxysmal Sympathetic Hyperactivity Signs
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Christian Salvatore, Mariagrazia D'Ippolito, Matteo Interlenghi, Antonio De Tanti, Silvia Premoselli, Anna Estraneo, Federico Scarponi, Orsola Masotta, Annamaria Romoli, Rita Formisano, Paolo Tonin, Bahia Hakiki, Diana Frattini, Chiara Bertolino, Annalisa Polidori, Mauro Zampolini, Lucia Francesca Lucca, Antonio Cerasa, Pamela Salucci, and Francesca Cava
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Barthel index ,Glasgow Outcome Scale ,Rancho Los Amigos Scale ,outcome prediction ,Cohort Studies ,Machine Learning ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Internal medicine ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Humans ,Medicine ,Paroxysmal sympathetic hyperactivity ,Acquired brain injury ,disorders of consciousness ,Neurorehabilitation ,Aged ,Persistent vegetative state ,Coma ,paroxysmal sympathetic hyperactivity ,business.industry ,Neurological Rehabilitation ,Recovery of Function ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Hospitalization ,acquired brain injury ,Autonomic Nervous System Diseases ,Brain Injuries ,Etiology ,Consciousness Disorders ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
In this multi-center study, we provide a systematic evaluation of the clinical variability associated with paroxysmal sympathetic hyperactivity (PSH) in patients with acquired brain injury (ABI) to determine how these signs can impact outcomes. A total of 156 ABI patients with a disorder of consciousness (DoC) were admitted to neurorehabilitation subacute units (intensive rehabilitation unit; IRU) and evaluated at baseline (T0), after 4 months from event (T1), and at discharge (T2). The outcome measure was the Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended, whereas age, sex, etiology, Coma Recovery Scale-Revised (CRS-r), Rancho Los Amigos Scale (RLAS), Early Rehabilitation Barthel Index (ERBI), PSH-Assessment Measure (PSH-AM) scores and other clinical features were considered as predictive factors. A machine learning (ML) approach was used to identify the best predictive model of clinical outcomes. The etiology was predominantly vascular (50.8%), followed by traumatic (36.2%). At admission, prevalence of PSH was 31.3%, which decreased to 16.6% and 4.4% at T1 and T2, respectively. At T2, 2.8% were dead and 61.1% had a full recovery of consciousness, whereas 36.1% remained in VS or MCS. A support vector machine (SVM)-based ML approach provides the best model with 82% accuracy in predicting outcomes. Analysis of variable importance shows that the most important clinical factors influencing the outcome are the PSH-AM scores measured at T0 and T1, together with neurological diagnosis, CRS-r, and RLAS scores measured at T0. This joint multi-center effort provides a comprehensive picture of the clinical impact of PSH signs in ABI patients, demonstrating its predictive value in comparison with other well-known clinical measurements.
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- 2021
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54. Visual rehabilitation with Retimax Vision Trainer in patients with severe Acquired Brain Injury: report of two cases
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Margherita Chiari, Caterina Savi, Erika Battagliola, Donatella Saviola, and Antonio De Tanti
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Visual rehabilitation ,Retimax Vision Trainer ,Acquired Brain Injury (ABI) ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Abstract
Retimax Vision Trainer is a device that has the purpose to improve visual function by means of the detection of a visual evoked potential associated with a sound feedback. We evaluated the effectiveness of rehabilitative treatment in two patients with Acquired Brain Injury (ABI). Results, subjectively appreciated, are objectively confirmed by the improvement of visual function.
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- 2014
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55. Thyrotropic Axis and Disorders of Consciousness in Acquired Brain Injury: A Potential Intriguing Association?
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Mele, Chiara, primary, De Tanti, Antonio, additional, Bagnato, Sergio, additional, Lucca, Lucia Francesca, additional, Saviola, Donatella, additional, Estraneo, Anna, additional, Moretta, Pasquale, additional, Marcuccio, Laura, additional, Lanzillo, Bernardo, additional, Aimaretti, Gianluca, additional, Nardone, Antonio, additional, Marzullo, Paolo, additional, and Pingue, Valeria, additional
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- 2022
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56. Redefining a minimal rehabilitation assessment protocol for severe acquired brain injuries
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LAVEZZI, Susanna, primary, BARGELLESI, Stefano, additional, CASSIO, Anna, additional, DE TANTI, Antonio, additional, GATTA, Giordano, additional, HAKIKI, Bahia, additional, LOMBARDI, Francesco, additional, MONTIS, Andrea, additional, POSTERARO, Federico, additional, SCARPONI, Federico, additional, TARICCO, Mariangela, additional, BOLDRINI, Paolo, additional, and CECCHI, Francesca, additional
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- 2022
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57. Effect of Rehabilitation Treatments on Disability in Persons With Disorders of Consciousness: A Propensity Score Study
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Sattin, D, Leonardi, M, Nelli, B, Bramanti, P, Marino, S, Ferro, S, Basaglia, N, Guido, D, Dolce, G, Lucca, L, Cortese, M, Ermio, C, Dattilo, T, Capomolla, S, Di Iasi, G, Estraneo, A, De Tanti, A, Maradini, N, Piperno, R, Ferri, A, Bergonzoni, A, Chiavaroli, F, Di Marco, F, Carli, S, Biasutti, E, Marin, D, Formisano, R, Rizza, F, Pisarri, F, Vichi, R, D'Urso, A, Grillo, G, Leto, A, Guerrasio, M, Taliento, C, Napolitano, F, Castelli, E, Lispi, M, Diverio, M, Barbieri, C, Bini, P, Angelino, G, Dada, O, Orlandi, A, Pistarini, C, Pisoni, C, Manera, M, Compostini, A, Aiachini, B, Pessina, A, Musio, A, Colombetti, E, Taraschi, S, Aluas, M, Croci, M, Negri, M, Zucchella, M, Guizzetti, G, Salamone, E, De Valle, G, Caroppi, S, Ramorino, E, Salina, D, Spannocchi, G, Strazzer, S, Villa, F, Guarnerio, C, Chiambretto, P, Dartizio, R, Feller, S, Franzoni, L, Giunco, F, Massironi, L, Azimonti, R, Marcolli, S, Meinecke, C, Buse, G, Marchesi, V, Molteni, F, Gramigna, C, Lanfranchi, M, Pisani, L, Sozzi, M, Borri, G, Cannata, A, Grillo, A, Roca, S, Locati, D, Arenare, F, Magnoni, A, Perin, C, Sussele, M, Quintana, T, Camici, M, Magistrelli, F, Samueli, T, San Felici, L, Manganelli, F, Vignati, M, Bellanova, L, Cattaneo, N, Ferraro, F, Olgiati, E, Brizioli, E, Vallasciani, M, Gironelli, L, Calderisi, E, Novelli, A, Scaramuzzo, R, Perino, C, Forno, R, Zamponi, E, Corna, S, Ferrario, S, Lamberti, G, Rosso, S, Colonna, F, Navarro, J, Trabacca, A, Gennaro, L, Bertolini, A, Addante, L, Amenduni, M, Fiore, P, Amoruso, M, Colella, D, Angelillo, M, Melis, G, Desogus, G, Baglieri, A, Galardi, G, Sant'Angelo, A, Posteraro, F, Forte, F, Logi, F, Potenza, F, Lino, M, Zaccara, G, Ragazzoni, A, Chiaramonti, R, March, A, Grober, G, Kaczor, M, Zelger, P, Mazzini, N, Monti, A, Zampolini, M, Scarponi, F, Avesani, R, Salvi, L, Tonin, P, Cosentino, E, Furlanetto, N, Bordin, M, Martinuzzi, A, Buffoni, M, Boldrini, P, Semerjian, M, Sattin D., Leonardi M., Nelli B., Bramanti P., Marino S., Ferro S., Basaglia N., Guido D., Dolce G., Lucca L. F, Cortese M. D., Ermio C., Dattilo T. L., Capomolla S., Di Iasi G., Estraneo A., De Tanti A., Maradini N., Piperno R., Ferri A., Basaglia N, Bergonzoni A., Chiavaroli F., Di Marco F., Carli S., Biasutti E., Marin D., Formisano R., Rizza F., Pisarri F. M., Vichi R., D'Urso A., Grillo G., Leto A., Guerrasio M., Taliento C., Napolitano F., Castelli E., Lispi M. L., Diverio M., Barbieri C., Bini P. P., Angelino G., Dada O., Orlandi A., Pistarini C., Pisoni C., Manera M., Compostini A., Aiachini B., Pessina A., Musio A., Colombetti E., Taraschi S., Aluas M., Croci M., Negri M., Zucchella M. A., Guizzetti G. B., Salamone E., De Valle G., Caroppi S. M., Ramorino E., Salina D., Spannocchi G., Strazzer S., Villa F., Guarnerio C., Chiambretto P., Dartizio R., Feller S., Franzoni L., Giunco F., Massironi L., Azimonti R., Marcolli S. S., Meinecke C., Buse G., Marchesi V, Molteni F., Gramigna C., Lanfranchi M., Pisani L., Sozzi M., Borri G., Cannata A. P., Grillo A., Roca S., Locati D., Arenare F., Magnoni A., Perin C., Sussele M., Quintana T. Y., Camici M. E., Magistrelli F., Samueli T., San Felici L., Manganelli F., Vignati M., Bellanova L., Cattaneo N., Ferraro F., Olgiati E., Brizioli E., Vallasciani M., Gironelli L., Calderisi E., Novelli A., Scaramuzzo R., Perino C., Forno R., Zamponi E., Corna S., Ferrario S., Lamberti G., Rosso S., Colonna F., Navarro J., Trabacca A., Gennaro L., Bertolini A., Addante L., Amenduni M. T., Fiore P., Amoruso M. T., Colella D., Angelillo M. T., Melis G., Desogus G., Baglieri A., Galardi G., Sant'Angelo A., Posteraro F., Forte F., Logi F., Potenza F., Lino M., Zaccara G., Ragazzoni A., Chiaramonti R., March A., Grober G., Kaczor M., Zelger P, Mazzini N., Monti A., Zampolini M., Scarponi F., Avesani R., Salvi L., Tonin P., Cosentino E., Furlanetto N., Bordin M., Martinuzzi A., Buffoni M., Boldrini P., Semerjian M., Sattin, D, Leonardi, M, Nelli, B, Bramanti, P, Marino, S, Ferro, S, Basaglia, N, Guido, D, Dolce, G, Lucca, L, Cortese, M, Ermio, C, Dattilo, T, Capomolla, S, Di Iasi, G, Estraneo, A, De Tanti, A, Maradini, N, Piperno, R, Ferri, A, Bergonzoni, A, Chiavaroli, F, Di Marco, F, Carli, S, Biasutti, E, Marin, D, Formisano, R, Rizza, F, Pisarri, F, Vichi, R, D'Urso, A, Grillo, G, Leto, A, Guerrasio, M, Taliento, C, Napolitano, F, Castelli, E, Lispi, M, Diverio, M, Barbieri, C, Bini, P, Angelino, G, Dada, O, Orlandi, A, Pistarini, C, Pisoni, C, Manera, M, Compostini, A, Aiachini, B, Pessina, A, Musio, A, Colombetti, E, Taraschi, S, Aluas, M, Croci, M, Negri, M, Zucchella, M, Guizzetti, G, Salamone, E, De Valle, G, Caroppi, S, Ramorino, E, Salina, D, Spannocchi, G, Strazzer, S, Villa, F, Guarnerio, C, Chiambretto, P, Dartizio, R, Feller, S, Franzoni, L, Giunco, F, Massironi, L, Azimonti, R, Marcolli, S, Meinecke, C, Buse, G, Marchesi, V, Molteni, F, Gramigna, C, Lanfranchi, M, Pisani, L, Sozzi, M, Borri, G, Cannata, A, Grillo, A, Roca, S, Locati, D, Arenare, F, Magnoni, A, Perin, C, Sussele, M, Quintana, T, Camici, M, Magistrelli, F, Samueli, T, San Felici, L, Manganelli, F, Vignati, M, Bellanova, L, Cattaneo, N, Ferraro, F, Olgiati, E, Brizioli, E, Vallasciani, M, Gironelli, L, Calderisi, E, Novelli, A, Scaramuzzo, R, Perino, C, Forno, R, Zamponi, E, Corna, S, Ferrario, S, Lamberti, G, Rosso, S, Colonna, F, Navarro, J, Trabacca, A, Gennaro, L, Bertolini, A, Addante, L, Amenduni, M, Fiore, P, Amoruso, M, Colella, D, Angelillo, M, Melis, G, Desogus, G, Baglieri, A, Galardi, G, Sant'Angelo, A, Posteraro, F, Forte, F, Logi, F, Potenza, F, Lino, M, Zaccara, G, Ragazzoni, A, Chiaramonti, R, March, A, Grober, G, Kaczor, M, Zelger, P, Mazzini, N, Monti, A, Zampolini, M, Scarponi, F, Avesani, R, Salvi, L, Tonin, P, Cosentino, E, Furlanetto, N, Bordin, M, Martinuzzi, A, Buffoni, M, Boldrini, P, Semerjian, M, Sattin D., Leonardi M., Nelli B., Bramanti P., Marino S., Ferro S., Basaglia N., Guido D., Dolce G., Lucca L. F, Cortese M. D., Ermio C., Dattilo T. L., Capomolla S., Di Iasi G., Estraneo A., De Tanti A., Maradini N., Piperno R., Ferri A., Basaglia N, Bergonzoni A., Chiavaroli F., Di Marco F., Carli S., Biasutti E., Marin D., Formisano R., Rizza F., Pisarri F. M., Vichi R., D'Urso A., Grillo G., Leto A., Guerrasio M., Taliento C., Napolitano F., Castelli E., Lispi M. L., Diverio M., Barbieri C., Bini P. P., Angelino G., Dada O., Orlandi A., Pistarini C., Pisoni C., Manera M., Compostini A., Aiachini B., Pessina A., Musio A., Colombetti E., Taraschi S., Aluas M., Croci M., Negri M., Zucchella M. A., Guizzetti G. B., Salamone E., De Valle G., Caroppi S. M., Ramorino E., Salina D., Spannocchi G., Strazzer S., Villa F., Guarnerio C., Chiambretto P., Dartizio R., Feller S., Franzoni L., Giunco F., Massironi L., Azimonti R., Marcolli S. S., Meinecke C., Buse G., Marchesi V, Molteni F., Gramigna C., Lanfranchi M., Pisani L., Sozzi M., Borri G., Cannata A. P., Grillo A., Roca S., Locati D., Arenare F., Magnoni A., Perin C., Sussele M., Quintana T. Y., Camici M. E., Magistrelli F., Samueli T., San Felici L., Manganelli F., Vignati M., Bellanova L., Cattaneo N., Ferraro F., Olgiati E., Brizioli E., Vallasciani M., Gironelli L., Calderisi E., Novelli A., Scaramuzzo R., Perino C., Forno R., Zamponi E., Corna S., Ferrario S., Lamberti G., Rosso S., Colonna F., Navarro J., Trabacca A., Gennaro L., Bertolini A., Addante L., Amenduni M. T., Fiore P., Amoruso M. T., Colella D., Angelillo M. T., Melis G., Desogus G., Baglieri A., Galardi G., Sant'Angelo A., Posteraro F., Forte F., Logi F., Potenza F., Lino M., Zaccara G., Ragazzoni A., Chiaramonti R., March A., Grober G., Kaczor M., Zelger P, Mazzini N., Monti A., Zampolini M., Scarponi F., Avesani R., Salvi L., Tonin P., Cosentino E., Furlanetto N., Bordin M., Martinuzzi A., Buffoni M., Boldrini P., and Semerjian M.
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the effects of rehabilitation (physical and cognitive) treatments on the diagnosis severity and Disability Rating Scale (DRS) scores, adjusted for a number of potential confounders measured at baseline, in a large cohort of patients with disorders of consciousness across time. Design and Setting: An observational, longitudinal (2 evaluations), multicenter project was made in 90 Italian centers. Participants: Patients (N=364) with a diagnosis of disorders of consciousness. Main Outcome Measures: Primary outcome was the severity of diagnosis, expressed on an ordinal scale (Other
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- 2020
58. The unidimensionality of the five Brain Injury Rehabilitation Trust Personality Questionnaires (BIRT-PQs) may be improved: preliminary evidence from classical psychometrics
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Basagni, B, Piscitelli, D, De Tanti, A, Pellicciari, L, Algeri, L, Caselli, S, Formisano, R, Conforti, J, Estraneo, A, Moretta, P, Gambini, M, Inzaghi, M, Lamberti, G, Mancuso, M, Quinquinio, C, Sozzi, M, Abbruzzese, L, Zettin, M, La Porta, F, Basagni, Benedetta, Piscitelli, Daniele, De Tanti, Antonio, Pellicciari, Leonardo, Algeri, Lorella, Caselli, Serena, Formisano, Rita, Conforti, Jessica, Estraneo, Anna, Moretta, Pasquale, Gambini, Maria Grazia, Inzaghi, Maria Grazia, Lamberti, Gianfranco, Mancuso, Mauro, Quinquinio, Cristina, Sozzi, Matteo, Abbruzzese, Laura, Zettin, Marina, La Porta, Fabio, Basagni, B, Piscitelli, D, De Tanti, A, Pellicciari, L, Algeri, L, Caselli, S, Formisano, R, Conforti, J, Estraneo, A, Moretta, P, Gambini, M, Inzaghi, M, Lamberti, G, Mancuso, M, Quinquinio, C, Sozzi, M, Abbruzzese, L, Zettin, M, La Porta, F, Basagni, Benedetta, Piscitelli, Daniele, De Tanti, Antonio, Pellicciari, Leonardo, Algeri, Lorella, Caselli, Serena, Formisano, Rita, Conforti, Jessica, Estraneo, Anna, Moretta, Pasquale, Gambini, Maria Grazia, Inzaghi, Maria Grazia, Lamberti, Gianfranco, Mancuso, Mauro, Quinquinio, Cristina, Sozzi, Matteo, Abbruzzese, Laura, Zettin, Marina, and La Porta, Fabio
- Abstract
Objective: To assess the internal construct validity (ICV) of the five Brain Injury Rehabilitation Trust Personality Questionnaires (BIRT-PQ) with Classical Test Theory methods. Methods: Multicenter cross-sectional study involving 11 Italian rehabilitation centers. BIRT-PQs were administered to patients with severe Acquired Brain Injury and their respective caregivers. ICV was assessed by the mean of an internal consistency analysis (ICA) and a Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA). Results: Data from 154 patients and their respective caregivers were pooled, giving a total sample of 308 subjects. Despite good overall values (alphas ranging from 0.811 to 0.937), the ICA revealed that several items within each scale did not contribute as expected to the total score. This result was confirmed by the CFA, which showed the misfit of the data to a unidimensional model (RMSEA ranging from 0.077 to 0.097). However, after accounting for local dependency found within the data, fitness to a unidimensional model improved significantly (RMSEA ranging from 0.050 to 0.062). Conclusion: Despite some limitations, our analyses demonstrated the lack of ICV for the BIRT-PQ total scores. It is envisaged that a more comprehensive ICV analysis will be performed with Rasch analysis, aiming to improve both the measurement properties and the administrative burden of each BIRT-PQ.
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- 2020
59. Redefining a minimal rehabilitation assessment protocol for severe acquired brain injuries
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Susanna LAVEZZI, Stefano BARGELLESI, Anna CASSIO, Antonio DE TANTI, Giordano GATTA, Bahia HAKIKI, Francesco LOMBARDI, Andrea MONTIS, Federico POSTERARO, Federico SCARPONI, Mariangela TARICCO, Paolo BOLDRINI, and Francesca CECCHI
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Adult ,Disability Evaluation ,Review Literature as Topic ,Italy ,Brain Injuries ,Rehabilitation ,Humans ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Disabled Persons ,Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine - Abstract
The assessment of patients with severe Acquired Brain Injury (sABI) is mandatory in every phase and setting of care, and requires a multidimensional and interdisciplinary approach, to develop the individual rehabilitation project, and monitor long-term functional outcomes. In 2001 the Italian Society of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine (SIMFER) published the minimal assessment protocol for traumatic sABI, providing a comprehensive, standardized functional assessment based on the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF), 2001. In 2007, a new protocol was published, extended to all sABI patients (PMGCA). In 2019, the SIMFER appointed a working group to provide a revised, updated version: the PMGCA2020.The purpose of this study was to describe the minimal assessment protocol to be applied at every stage and setting of the care process of patients with sABI.The working group, including one neurologist and 11 physiatrists experts in sABI rehabilitation, performed a review of the international recommendations for sABI assessment focusing on the following key words: "sABI assessment," "sABI rehabilitation," "sABI prognostic factors," "sABI rehabilitation assessment," "sABI outcome," in MEDLINE. Revision and integration proposals by each member were written and motivated, discussed and voted.The PMGCA2020 is addressed to sABI adult patients. It investigates the main clinical problems of sABI at any time of the rehabilitation pathway. It includes a demographic/anamnestic section, a clinical/functional assessment section and an outcome measures section following the ICF model of functioning and the model of the construction of the rehabilitation project.The PMGCA2020 provides an updated tool for the multidimensional rehabilitation assessment of sABI patients, at any stage of the rehabilitation pathway. Further studies will allow the validation of this minimum set of variables paving the way to an assessment standardization of patients with sABI in the rehabilitation settings.This minimum set of variables, defining patient's functioning and clinical status and outcomes, at every stage and setting of the care process to provide a framework for the standardization of the clinical evaluation of patients with sABI in rehabilitation settings.
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- 2022
60. The Italian version of the Brain Injury Rehabilitation Trust (BIRT) personality questionnaires: five new measures of personality change after acquired brain injury
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Basagni, Benedetta, Navarrete, Eduardo, Bertoni, Debora, Cattran, Charlotte, Mapelli, Daniela, Oddy, Michael, and De Tanti, Antonio
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- 2015
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61. Italian standardization of the Apples Cancellation Test
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Mancuso, Mauro, Rosadoni, S., Capitani, D., Bickerton, W. L., Humphreys, G. W., De Tanti, A., Zampolini, M., Galardi, G., Caputo, M., De Pellegrin, S., Angelini, A., Bartalini, B., Bartolo, M., Carboncini, M. C., Gemignani, P., Spaccavento, S., Cantagallo, A., Zoccolotti, P., and Antonucci, G.
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- 2015
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62. Cognitive reserve index and functional and cognitive outcomes in severe acquired brain injury: A pilot study
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Giuseppe Pedrazzi, Antonio De Tanti, Cosimo Costantino, Katia De Gaetano, Benedetta Basagni, Debora Bertoni, and Federica Petraglia
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050103 clinical psychology ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,05 social sciences ,Pilot Projects ,Cognition ,Neuropsychological Tests ,medicine.disease ,Affect (psychology) ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Cognitive Reserve ,Brain Injuries ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Neurological rehabilitation ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Set (psychology) ,Psychology ,Acquired brain injury ,Retrospective Studies ,Cognitive reserve ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Many variables affect outcome after brain injury. Cognitive reserve (CR) is a subjective factor that reflects a set of personal characteristics and that differentiates individuals. It may influence an individual's capacity to react to brain injury.To study the effects of cognitive reserve on functional and cognitive outcome at the end of rehabilitation, in patients with severe acquired brain injury (sABI), by means of the Cognitive Reserve Index questionnaire (CRIq).We report a retrospective study of a continuous series of sABI patients on first admission to a rehabilitation center. Disability and cognitive outcomes were recorded.In the 94 patients enrolled, the assessments after rehabilitation showed a significant gain measured with the disability Rating Scale for patients with a higher CR (CRIq≥ 85). A significant negative correlation was found: between CRIq scores and the interval elapsing before first access to neuropsychological assessment, between CRIq scores, especially level of education, and tests that measure the same domain (attention).Improvements in overall and cognitive disability emerged, but CR did not seem to substantially influence outcome in this sample of patients. This result may be partly due to the clinical severity of the population studied and the sample's dimension, although quantitatively representative of the population.
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- 2020
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63. Reduced Neuron-Specific Enolase Levels in Chronic Severe Traumatic Brain Injury
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Sergio Bagnato, Teresa Barone, Giuseppe Galardi, Maria Andriolo, Caterina Pistarini, Antonio De Tanti, Lucia Francesca Lucca, and Cristina Boccagni
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Adult ,Male ,030506 rehabilitation ,Traumatic brain injury ,Enolase ,macromolecular substances ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Brain Injuries, Traumatic ,medicine ,Humans ,business.industry ,Neurodegeneration ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Pathophysiology ,nervous system ,Phosphopyruvate Hydratase ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Neuroscience ,Biomarkers ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Growing evidence suggests that pathophysiological mechanisms leading to neurodegeneration and neuronal loss take place during the chronic phase of a severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). In this study we evaluated a well-established marker of brain injury, the neuron-specific enolase (NSE), in the serum of 51 patients with severe TBI (86% males, mean age 33.8 ± 11.1 years). All patients' samples were available from a previous study and the mean time between TBI and blood sample collection was 23.2 ± 31.5 months (28 patients were evaluated within 12 months of TBI and 23 patients were evaluated ≥12 months after TBI). Patients' NSE levels were compared with those obtained from 30 age and sex-matched healthy controls (87% males, 33.7 ± 11.3 years). We found that NSE levels were significantly lower in patients (median 3.2 ng/mL; 25th, 75th percentile 2.5, 5.1) than in healthy controls (median 4.1 ng/mL; 25th, 75th percentile 3.1, 7.5) (
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- 2020
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64. Additional file 2 of Effectiveness of action observation therapy based on virtual reality technology in the motor rehabilitation of paretic stroke patients: a randomized clinical trial
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Errante, Antonino, Saviola, Donatella, Cantoni, Matteo, Iannuzzelli, Katia, Ziccarelli, Settimio, Togni, Fabrizio, Simonini, Marcello, Malchiodi, Carolina, Bertoni, Debora, Inzaghi, Maria Grazia, Bozzetti, Francesca, Menozzi, Roberto, Quarenghi, Annamaria, Quarenghi, Paola, Bosone, Daniele, Fogassi, Leonardo, Salvi, Gian Piero, and De Tanti, Antonio
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Additional file 2. Examples of exercises proposed for therehabilitation treatment.
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- 2022
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65. Additional file 3 of Effectiveness of action observation therapy based on virtual reality technology in the motor rehabilitation of paretic stroke patients: a randomized clinical trial
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Errante, Antonino, Saviola, Donatella, Cantoni, Matteo, Iannuzzelli, Katia, Ziccarelli, Settimio, Togni, Fabrizio, Simonini, Marcello, Malchiodi, Carolina, Bertoni, Debora, Inzaghi, Maria Grazia, Bozzetti, Francesca, Menozzi, Roberto, Quarenghi, Annamaria, Quarenghi, Paola, Bosone, Daniele, Fogassi, Leonardo, Salvi, Gian Piero, and De Tanti, Antonio
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Additional file 3. Informed consent form.
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- 2022
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66. Additional file 1 of Effectiveness of action observation therapy based on virtual reality technology in the motor rehabilitation of paretic stroke patients: a randomized clinical trial
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Errante, Antonino, Saviola, Donatella, Cantoni, Matteo, Iannuzzelli, Katia, Ziccarelli, Settimio, Togni, Fabrizio, Simonini, Marcello, Malchiodi, Carolina, Bertoni, Debora, Inzaghi, Maria Grazia, Bozzetti, Francesca, Menozzi, Roberto, Quarenghi, Annamaria, Quarenghi, Paola, Bosone, Daniele, Fogassi, Leonardo, Salvi, Gian Piero, and De Tanti, Antonio
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ComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSING ,Data_FILES - Abstract
Additional file 1. SPIRIT Checklist: Recommended items to address in aclinical trial protocol and related documents.
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- 2022
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67. Multi-center observational study on occurrence and related clinical factors of neurogenic heterotopic ossification in patients with disorders of consciousness
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G P Salvi, Lucia Francesca Lucca, P Bongioanni, M Bertoni, S Gentile, S Premoselli, Michelangelo Bartolo, Rita Formisano, C Perin, Elena Rossato, E Casanova, M Gambarin, Orsola Masotta, Federico Scarponi, A. Pascarella, Domenico Intiso, Anna Estraneo, A De Tanti, R Antenucci, Valeria Pingue, Annamaria Romoli, Francesca Pistoia, Luigi Trojano, Silvia Marino, Antonino Sant'Angelo, A R Diana, Estraneo, A, Pascarella, A, Masotta, O, Bartolo, M, Pistoia, F, Perin, C, Marino, S, Lucca, L, Pingue, V, Casanova, E, Romoli, A M, Gentile, S, Formisano, R, Salvi, G P, Scarponi, F, De Tanti, A, Bongioanni, P, Rossato, E, Santangelo, A, Diana, A R, Gambarin, M, Intiso, D, Antenucci, R, Premoselli, S, Bertoni, M, Trojano, L, Romoli, A, Salvi, G, and Diana, A
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030506 rehabilitation ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Heterotopic ossification ,disorders of consciousne ,Consciousness ,Cross-sectional study ,media_common.quotation_subject ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Neuroscience (miscellaneous) ,Disorders of consciousness ,Ossification ,vegetative state ,rehabilitation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,disorders of consciousness ,minimally conscious state ,Consciousness Disorders ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Persistent Vegetative State ,Ossification, Heterotopic ,media_common ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,Minimally conscious state ,medicine.disease ,MED/34 - MEDICINA FISICA E RIABILITATIVA ,Observational study ,Heterotopic ,Neurology (clinical) ,0305 other medical science ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Aims: to assess occurrence and clinical correlates of neurogenic heterotopic ossifications (NHO) in patients with prolonged disorder of consciousness (DoC). Design: multi-center cross-sectional observational study. Setting: 23 intensive neurorehabilitation units. Subjects: 287 patients with prolonged disorder of consciousness (DoC; 150 in vegetative state, VS, and 128 in minimally conscious state, MCS) of different etiology (vascular=125, traumatic=83, anoxic=56, others=14). Main Measures: clinical evidence of NHO confirmed by standard radiological and/or sonographic evaluation; Coma Recovery Scale-Revised; Disability Rating Scale (DRS); Early Rehabilitation Barthel Index; presence of ventilator support, spasticity, bone fractures and paroxysmal sympathetic hyperactivity. Results: 31 patients (11.2%) presented NHO. Univariate analyses showed that NHO was associated with VS diagnosis, traumatic etiology, high DRS category and total score, and high occurrence of limb spasticity and bone fractures. A cluster-corrected binary logistic regression model (excluding spasticity available in a subset of patients) showed that only lower DRS total score and presence of bone fractures were independently associated with NHO. Conclusions: NHO are relatively frequent in patients with DoC, and are independently associated with functional disability, bone fractures and spasticity. These findings contribute to identifying patients with DoC prone to develop NHO and requiring special interventions to improve functional recovery.
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- 2021
68. Some evidence on Gerstmann's syndrome: A case study on a variant of the clinical disorder
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Antonio De Tanti, Girolamo Crisi, Claudio Luzzatti, Benedetta Basagni, Francesca Bozzetti, Leonardo Fogassi, Chiara Pinardi, Antonino Errante, Basagni, B, Luzzatti, C, De Tanti, A, Bozzetti, F, Crisi, G, Pinardi, C, Errante, A, and Fogassi, L
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Autotopoagnosia ,Gerstmann Syndrome ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Acalculia ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Intraparietal sulcus ,Audiology ,M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,050105 experimental psychology ,Angular gyrus ,03 medical and health sciences ,Gerstmann's syndrome ,0302 clinical medicine ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Supramarginal gyrus ,Dysgraphia ,Parietal Lobe ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,05 social sciences ,Superior longitudinal fasciculus ,Neuropsychology ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Right-left confusion ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
We describe the case of a bilingual patient with persistent symptoms largely, although not fully, consistent with those that are usually reported in Gerstmann’s syndrome. Twenty months after a spontaneous primary intracranial hemorrhage, the patient was evaluated with a series of neuropsychological tasks and underwent an MRI investigation based on Diffusion Tensor Imaging probabilistic tractography. The patient suffered from dysgraphia (difficulty in the access to the graphemic representation of letter forms), autotopoagnosia (difficulties in locating body parts on verbal command), right–left confusion (difficulties in localizing right and left side of symmetrical body parts), and number processing/calculation impairments (predominant difficulties on transcoding tasks). Probabilistic tractography revealed a relatively spared superior longitudinal fasciculus and severe damage to the subcortical white matter connecting the angular gyrus with other parietal regions, such as the intraparietal sulcus and the supramarginal gyrus. Within the framework of the contemporary cognitive accounts of Gerstmann’s syndrome, the case supports the assumption of an anatomical intraparietal disconnection more than a functional Grundstorung (core impairment).
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- 2021
69. Effectiveness of action observation therapy based on virtual reality technology in the motor rehabilitation of paretic stroke patients: a randomized clinical trial
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Antonino Errante, Donatella Saviola, Matteo Cantoni, Katia Iannuzzelli, Settimio Ziccarelli, Fabrizio Togni, Marcello Simonini, Carolina Malchiodi, Debora Bertoni, Maria Grazia Inzaghi, Francesca Bozzetti, Roberto Menozzi, Annamaria Quarenghi, Paola Quarenghi, Daniele Bosone, Leonardo Fogassi, Gian Piero Salvi, and Antonio De Tanti
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Adult ,Stroke ,Technology ,Stroke Rehabilitation ,Virtual Reality ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine ,Child ,Mirror Neurons - Abstract
Background The rehabilitation of paretic stroke patients uses a wide range of intervention programs to improve the function of impaired upper limb. A new rehabilitative approach, called action observation therapy (AOT) is based on the discovery of mirror neurons and has been used to improve the motor functions of adult stroke patients and children with cerebral palsy. Recently, virtual reality (VR) has provided the potential to increase the frequency and effectiveness of rehabilitation treatment by offering challenging and motivating tasks. Methods The purpose of the present project is to design a randomized controlled six-month follow-up trial (RCT) to evaluate whether action observation (AO) added to standard VR (AO + VR) is effective in improving upper limb function in patients with stroke, compared with a control treatment consisting of observation of naturalistic scenes (CO) without any action content, followed by VR training (CO + VR). Discussion AO + VR treatment may provide an addition to the rehabilitative interventions currently available for recovery after stroke and could be utilized within standard sensorimotor training or in individualized tele-rehabilitation. Trial registration The trial has been prospectively registered on ClinicalTrials.gov. NCT05163210. 17 December 2021.
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- 2021
70. Development of a generic version of the multiple errands test for severe acquired brain injuries
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Donatella Saviola, Federica Rovere, Antonio De Tanti, Benedetta Basagni, Eduardo Navarrete, Sara Bosetti, Silvia Ermon, and Sabrina Cantelli
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Traumatic brain injury ,traumatic brain injury ,executive functions ,medicine.disease ,Executive functions ,ecological evaluation ,Test (assessment) ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Cognitive rehabilitation therapy ,Brain injury ,cognitive rehabilitation ,Psychology - Abstract
Impairment of executive functions is a frequent and disabling consequence of brain injury. In 1991, Shallice and Burgess elaborated the Multiple Errand Test (MET) to assess everyday troubles associated with this impairment. Our first aim was to create a generic version of MET (MET-G) readily adaptable to different settings and for retesting. The second aim was to validate the revised version to detect executive impairment in individuals with severe ABI. An inter-professional team of experts in neurorehabilitation created a revised version of MET. Twenty-one patients with sABI (severe Acquired Brain Injury) and a control group of 20 neurologically healthy subjects, took part in the testing of MET-G. MET-G clearly distinguished people with sABI from healthy controls based on Total error score, task completion, and rule breaking. The test showed good inter-rater reliability and internal consistency. The new, generic version of MET was able to differentiate adults with sABI from controls and proved to be a good tool for evaluating executive functions in these patients in daily-life contexts. Indications on how to adapt the test to different contexts and different scoring modalities are provided.
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- 2021
71. What is done is not always what should be done: Results of an Italian survey on management of cranioplasty in neurorehabilitation
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La Porta, Fabio, De Tanti, Antonio, Estraneo, Anna, and Formisano, Rita
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- 2021
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72. Sustained axonal degeneration in prolonged disorders of consciousness
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Bagnato, Sergio, D'Ippolito, Maria, Boccagni, Cristina, De Tanti, Antonio, Lucca, Lucia Francesca, Nardone, Antonio, Salucci, Pamela, Fiorilla, Teresa, Pingue, Valeria, Gennaro, Serena, Ursino, Maria, Colombo, Valentina, Barone, Teresa, Rubino, Francesca, and Andriolo, Maria
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- 2021
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73. Identifying clinical complexity in patients affected by severe acquired brain injury in neurorehabilitation: A cross sectional survey
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Scarponi, F, Zampolini, M, Zucchella, C, Bargellesi, S, Fassio, C, Pistoia, F, Bartolo, M, Raggi, R, Beatrici, M, Macchetta, C, Cocchini, L, Benedetti, A, Bianconi, F, Bramanti, P, Marino, S, Corallo, F, Brambilla, M, Carboncini M, C, Spina, V, Cervigni, G, Cimenti, F, Previaio, C, Semerjian, M, Colombari, M, De Cicco, D, De Tanti, A, Iardella, L, Diverio, M, Grifoni, C, Carl, V, Pasqualone, E, Estraneo, A, Formisano, R, Ciurli M, P, Galardi, M, Santangelo, A, Giorgini, T, Biasutti, E, Iaia, V, Intiso, D, Lamberti, G, Antoniono, E, Lanfranchi, M, Lavezzi, S, Chiavaroli, R, Lucca L, F, Maggioni, G, Mancuso, M, Canova, S, Mandala, G, Melizza, G, Montis, A, Pilia, F, Mulè, C, Navarro, J, Lanzillotti, C, Perin, C, Petrozzino, S, Schierano, G, Battistini, A, Premoselli, S, Salvi, P, Simonini, M, Sara, M, Serafini, P, Fortuna, R, Sergio M, A, Volanti, P, Scarponi F., Zampolini M., Zucchella C., Bargellesi S., Fassio C., Pistoia F., Bartolo M, Raggi R, Beatrici M, Macchetta C, Cocchini L, Benedetti A, Bianconi F, Bramanti P, Marino S, Corallo F, Brambilla M, Carboncini M C., Spina V, Cervigni G, Cimenti F, Previaio C, Semerjian M, Colombari M, De Cicco D, De Tanti A, Iardella L, Diverio M), Grifoni C, Carl V, Pasqualone E, Estraneo A, Formisano R, Ciurli M P., Galardi M, Santangelo A, Giorgini T, Biasutti E, Iaia V, Intiso D, Lamberti G, Antoniono E, Lanfranchi M, Lavezzi S, Chiavaroli R, Lucca L F., Maggioni G, Mancuso M, Canova S, Mandala G, Melizza G, Montis A, Pilia F, Mulè C., Navarro J, Lanzillotti C, Perin C, Petrozzino S, Schierano G, Battistini A, Premoselli S, Salvi P, Simonini M, Sara M Pardo M, Serafini P, Fortuna R, Sergio M A., Volanti P, Scarponi, F, Zampolini, M, Zucchella, C, Bargellesi, S, Fassio, C, Pistoia, F, Bartolo, M, Raggi, R, Beatrici, M, Macchetta, C, Cocchini, L, Benedetti, A, Bianconi, F, Bramanti, P, Marino, S, Corallo, F, Brambilla, M, Carboncini M, C, Spina, V, Cervigni, G, Cimenti, F, Previaio, C, Semerjian, M, Colombari, M, De Cicco, D, De Tanti, A, Iardella, L, Diverio, M, Grifoni, C, Carl, V, Pasqualone, E, Estraneo, A, Formisano, R, Ciurli M, P, Galardi, M, Santangelo, A, Giorgini, T, Biasutti, E, Iaia, V, Intiso, D, Lamberti, G, Antoniono, E, Lanfranchi, M, Lavezzi, S, Chiavaroli, R, Lucca L, F, Maggioni, G, Mancuso, M, Canova, S, Mandala, G, Melizza, G, Montis, A, Pilia, F, Mulè, C, Navarro, J, Lanzillotti, C, Perin, C, Petrozzino, S, Schierano, G, Battistini, A, Premoselli, S, Salvi, P, Simonini, M, Sara, M, Serafini, P, Fortuna, R, Sergio M, A, Volanti, P, Scarponi F., Zampolini M., Zucchella C., Bargellesi S., Fassio C., Pistoia F., Bartolo M, Raggi R, Beatrici M, Macchetta C, Cocchini L, Benedetti A, Bianconi F, Bramanti P, Marino S, Corallo F, Brambilla M, Carboncini M C., Spina V, Cervigni G, Cimenti F, Previaio C, Semerjian M, Colombari M, De Cicco D, De Tanti A, Iardella L, Diverio M), Grifoni C, Carl V, Pasqualone E, Estraneo A, Formisano R, Ciurli M P., Galardi M, Santangelo A, Giorgini T, Biasutti E, Iaia V, Intiso D, Lamberti G, Antoniono E, Lanfranchi M, Lavezzi S, Chiavaroli R, Lucca L F., Maggioni G, Mancuso M, Canova S, Mandala G, Melizza G, Montis A, Pilia F, Mulè C., Navarro J, Lanzillotti C, Perin C, Petrozzino S, Schierano G, Battistini A, Premoselli S, Salvi P, Simonini M, Sara M Pardo M, Serafini P, Fortuna R, Sergio M A., and Volanti P
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Literature shows that occurrence of comorbidities in people with severe acquired brain injury (sABI) is a common problem in rehabilitation stay. Consequently, patients could require an increase of interventions for diagnosis and treatment of clinical conditions, with a reduction of the rehabilitative take in charge for both clinical and organizational aspects. AIM: The first aim was to evaluate the rate of clinical conditions of sABI patients at admission in rehabilitation and the types of rehabilitative interventions performed in the first week; second objective was to explore the impact of clinical conditions on real rehabilitative take in charge. DESIGN: Cross sectional study. SETTING: Inpatient rehabilitation centers. POPULATION: The study included data from 586 sABI patients. METHODS: Collected data regarded anamnestic information, functional status assessed by means of Glasgow Outcome Scale, Levels of cognitive functioning, Early Rehabilitation Barthel Index, comorbidities at admission and type of rehabilitative interventions carried out in first week of rehabilitation stay. Spearman correlation coefficients were applied to detect possible correlations between the number of treatments in first week and clinical variables; through a multiple regression analysis the effect of patient’s characteristics on rehabilitative take in charge was explored. RESULTS: Data from the sABI patients: mean age 55.1±17.1 years; etiology of sABI was vascular in 315 patients (53.8%), anoxic in 83 (14.2%), neoplastic in 17 (2.9%), infectious in 15 (2.6%), traumatic in 150 (25.6%); 6 subjects (1%) presented a mixed etiology. Need of cardiorespiratory monitoring, pressure sores, infections or presence of multi drug resistant bacteria were the most frequent comorbidities. Passive mobilization, sitting positioning, arousal/awareness stimulation, evaluation and management of dysphagia were the interventions most frequently carried out in the first week. The regression analysi
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- 2019
74. Multi-center study on overall clinical complexity of patients with prolonged disorders of consciousness of different etiologies
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G P Salvi, A R Diana, Valeria Pingue, Michelangelo Bartolo, Anna Estraneo, S Premoselli, F De Bellis, Rita Formisano, Domenico Intiso, R Antenucci, M Gambarin, Federico Scarponi, P Bongioanni, C Perin, A De Tanti, Orsola Masotta, Annamaria Romoli, Francesca Pistoia, S Gentile, Elena Rossato, Silvia Marino, Antonino Sant'Angelo, E Casanova, Lucia Francesca Lucca, M Bertoni, Estraneo, A, Masotta, O, Bartolo, M, Pistoia, F, Perin, C, Marino, S, Lucca, L, Pingue, V, Casanova, E, Romoli, A, Gentile, S, Formisano, R, Salvi, G, Scarponi, F, De Tanti, A, Bongioanni, P, Rossato, E, Santangelo, A, Diana, A, Gambarin, M, Intiso, D, Antenucci, R, Premoselli, S, Bertoni, M, and De Bellis, F
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030506 rehabilitation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Consciousness ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Neuroscience (miscellaneous) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Medicine ,Humans ,clinical complexity ,Disorders of consciousne ,Neurorehabilitation ,Persistent vegetative state ,Coma ,Disorders of consciousness ,neurorehabilitation ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,Persistent Vegetative State ,Minimally conscious state ,medical complications ,outcome ,medical complication ,Disability Rating Scale ,medicine.disease ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Brain Injuries ,Etiology ,Consciousness Disorders ,Wakefulness ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Aim: to assess overall clinical complexity of patients with acquired disorders of consciousness (DoC) in vegetative state/unresponsive wakefulness syndrome (VS/UWS) vs. minimally conscious state- MCS) and in different etiologies. Design: Multi-center cross-sectional observational study. Setting: 23 intensive neurorehabilitation units. Subjects: 264 patients with DoC in the post-acute phase: VS/UWS = 141, and MCS = 123 due to vascular (n = 125), traumatic (n = 83) or anoxic (n = 56) brain injury. Main Measures: Coma Recovery Scale-Revised, and Disability Rating Scale (DRS); presence of medical devices (e.g., for eating or breathing); occurrence and severity of medical complications. Results: patients in DoC, and particularly those in VS/UWS, showed severe overall clinical complexity. Anoxic patients had higher overall clinical complexity, lower level of responsiveness/consciousness, higher functional disability, and higher needs of medical devices. Vascular patients had worse premorbid clinical comorbidities. The two etiologies showed a comparable rate of MC, higher than that observed in traumatic etiology. Conclusion: overall clinical complexity is significantly higher in VS/UWS than in MCS, and in non-traumatic vs. traumatic etiology. These findings could explain the worse clinical evolution reported in anoxic and vascular etiologies and in VS/UWS patients and contribute to plan patient-tailored care and rehabilitation programmes.
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- 2020
75. Urgent Measures for the Containment of the Coronavirus (Covid-19) Epidemic in the Neurorehabilitation/Rehabilitation Departments in the Phase of Maximum Expansion of the Epidemic
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Bartolo, M., Intiso, D., Lentino, C., Sandrini, G., Paolucci, S., Zampolini, M., Alfonsi, E., Antonucci, G., Baricich, A., Casu, G., Ciancarelli, I., Cisari, C., De Tanti, A., Estraneo, A., Ferraro, F., Gandolfi, M., Invernizzi, M., Iolascon, G., Martinuzzi, A., Morelli, D., Morone, G., Munari, D., Nordio, S., Picelli, A., Scarponi, F., Pingue, V., Solaro, C., Trompetto, C., Bartolo, M., Intiso, D., Lentino, C., Sandrini, G., Paolucci, S., Zampolini, M., Alfonsi, E., Antonucci, G., Baricich, A., Casu, G., Ciancarelli, I., Cisari, C., De Tanti, A., Estraneo, A., Ferraro, F., Gandolfi, M., Invernizzi, M., Iolascon, G., Martinuzzi, A., Morelli, D., Morone, G., Munari, D., Nordio, S., Picelli, A., Scarponi, F., Pingue, V., Solaro, C., and Trompetto, C.
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Settore M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Phase (combat) ,lcsh:RC346-429 ,epidemic ,rehabilitation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Documentation ,Intensive care ,Health care ,Pandemic ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,COVID-19, rehabilitation, neurorehabilitation, epidemic, infection, health care, organization ,lcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,Neurorehabilitation ,neurorehabilitation ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,COVID-19 ,health care ,infection ,organization ,medicine.disease ,Neurology ,Perspective ,Neurology (clinical) ,Medical emergency ,business ,Choking ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
COVID-19 has rapidly become a pandemic emergency, distressing health systems in each affected country. COVID-19 determines the need for healthcare in a large number of people in an extremely short time and, like a tsunami wave, overruns emergency, infectious diseases, and pneumology departments as well as intensive care units, choking healthcare services. Rehabilitation services are also affected by this epidemic which forces radical changes both in the organization and in the operating methods. In the absence of reference literature on this issue, this report aims to provide a background documentation to support physicians and healthcare personnel involved in neurorehabilitation and rehabilitation care.
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- 2020
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76. The unidimensionality of the five Brain Injury Rehabilitation Trust Personality Questionnaires (BIRT-PQs) may be improved: preliminary evidence from classical psychometrics
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Anna Estraneo, Laura Abbruzzese, Pasquale Moretta, Lorella Algeri, Daniele Piscitelli, Jessica Conforti, Leonardo Pellicciari, Serena Caselli, Rita Formisano, Gianfranco Lamberti, Benedetta Basagni, Marina Zettin, Maria Grazia Gambini, Fabio La Porta, Maria Grazia Inzaghi, Cristina Quinquinio, Antonio De Tanti, Mauro Mancuso, Matteo Sozzi, Basagni, B, Piscitelli, D, De Tanti, A, Pellicciari, L, Algeri, L, Caselli, S, Formisano, R, Conforti, J, Estraneo, A, Moretta, P, Gambini, M, Inzaghi, M, Lamberti, G, Mancuso, M, Quinquinio, C, Sozzi, M, Abbruzzese, L, Zettin, M, and La Porta, F
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030506 rehabilitation ,Psychometrics ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Neuroscience (miscellaneous) ,Behavioral Symptom ,Personality Assessment ,Trust ,Classical test theory ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Brain Injurie ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,Acquired brain injury ,Rehabilitation ,Rasch model ,Construct validity ,Reproducibility of Results ,medicine.disease ,Confirmatory factor analysis ,Brain Injuries ,Behavioral Symptoms ,Outcome Assessment (Health care) ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Italy ,Neurology (clinical) ,Personality Assessment Inventory ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Psychometric ,Clinical psychology ,Personality - Abstract
Objective: To assess the internal construct validity (ICV) of the five Brain Injury Rehabilitation Trust Personality Questionnaires (BIRT-PQ) with Classical Test Theory methods. Methods: Multicenter cross-sectional study involving 11 Italian rehabilitation centers. BIRT-PQs were administered to patients with severe Acquired Brain Injury and their respective caregivers. ICV was assessed by the mean of an internal consistency analysis (ICA) and a Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA). Results: Data from 154 patients and their respective caregivers were pooled, giving a total sample of 308 subjects. Despite good overall values (alphas ranging from 0.811 to 0.937), the ICA revealed that several items within each scale did not contribute as expected to the total score. This result was confirmed by the CFA, which showed the misfit of the data to a unidimensional model (RMSEA ranging from 0.077 to 0.097). However, after accounting for local dependency found within the data, fitness to a unidimensional model improved significantly (RMSEA ranging from 0.050 to 0.062). Conclusion: Despite some limitations, our analyses demonstrated the lack of ICV for the BIRT-PQ total scores. It is envisaged that a more comprehensive ICV analysis will be performed with Rasch analysis, aiming to improve both the measurement properties and the administrative burden of each BIRT-PQ.
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- 2020
77. Monitoring the microcirculation in the diagnosis and follow-up of systemic sclerosis patients: Focus on pulmonary and peripheral vascular manifestations
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Barbara, Ruaro, Maria Gabriella Nallino, Andrea, Casabella, Salton, Francesco, Confalonieri, Paola, Antonio De Tanti, Cosimo, Bruni, Ruaro, Barbara, Barbara, Ruaro, Maria Gabriella Nallino, Andrea, Casabella, Salton, Francesco, Confalonieri, Paola, Antonio De Tanti, Cosimo, Bruni, and Ruaro, Barbara
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,microangiopathy ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Scleroderma ,Microcirculation ,Microscopic Angioscopy ,Systemic sclerosi ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Fibrosis ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Optical Doppler Tomography ,Molecular Biology ,naiflod videocapillaroscopy ,Skin ,Scleroderma, Systemic ,integumentary system ,business.industry ,Microangiopathy ,Blood flow ,medicine.disease ,Connective tissue disease ,Systemic sclerosis ,pulmonary artery hypertension ,Capillaries ,Cardiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Perfusion ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is a connective tissue disease, characterized by vascular damage and progressive fibrosis, affecting the skin and internal organs. The vascular changes include functional and structural abnormalities in the microcirculation, which play a central role not only in diagnosis but also in the prognosis and follow-up of systemic sclerosis patients. Nailfold videocapillaroscopy (NVC) is a safe, validated, noninvasive, inexpensive, reliable, and reproducible method that allows for the evaluation of structural changes in scleroderma microangiopathy. However, capillary blood flow/perfusion cannot be measured by NVC under standard conditions and, consequently, must rely on various laser techniques and thermography for the assessment and quantification of cutaneous blood perfusion. Other emerging technologies, such as optical Doppler tomography and spectroscopy, may be used to evaluate the skin flow. This review updates current knowledge on the use of microvascular evaluation techniques in SSc, including complications such as digital ulcers and pulmonary arterial hypertension.
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- 2020
78. Sustained Axonal Degeneration in Prolonged Disorders of Consciousness
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Antonio De Tanti, Maria Andriolo, Valeria Pingue, Maria Ursino, Sergio Bagnato, Antonio Nardone, Teresa Fiorilla, Teresa Barone, Cristina Boccagni, Lucia Francesca Lucca, Francesca Rubino, Serena Gennaro, Valentina Colombo, Maria Enza D'Ippolito, and Pamela Salucci
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hypoxic-ischemic brain injury ,Traumatic brain injury ,Neurofilament light ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Article ,vegetative state ,medicine ,Persistent vegetative state ,unresponsive wakefulness syndrome ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,traumatic brain injury ,Minimally conscious state ,biomarkers of brain injury ,medicine.disease ,Pathophysiology ,minimally conscious state ,neurofilament light chain ,Neurology ,secondary brain injury ,Anesthesia ,Etiology ,Wakefulness ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Axonal degeneration ,RC321-571 - Abstract
(1) Background: Sustained axonal degeneration may play a critical role in prolonged disorder of consciousness (DOCs) pathophysiology. We evaluated levels of neurofilament light chain (NFL), an axonal injury marker, in patients with unresponsive wakefulness syndrome (UWS) and in the minimally conscious state (MCS) after traumatic brain injury (TBI) and hypoxic-ischemic brain injury (HIBI). (2) Methods: This prospective multicenter blinded study involved 70 patients with prolonged DOC and 70 sex-/age-matched healthy controls. Serum NFL levels were evaluated at 1–3 and 6 months post-injury and compared with those of controls. NFL levels were compared by DOC severity (UWS vs. MCS) and etiology (TBI vs. HIBI). (3) Results: Patients’ serum NFL levels were significantly higher than those of controls at 1–3 and 6 months post-injury (medians, 1729 and 426 vs. 90 pg/mL, both p <, 0.0001). NFL levels were higher in patients with UWS than in those in MCS at 1–3 months post-injury (p = 0.008) and in patients with HIBI than in those with TBI at 6 months post-injury (p = 0.037). (4) Conclusions: Patients with prolonged DOC present sustained axonal degeneration that is affected differently over time by brain injury severity and etiology.
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- 2021
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79. Development of a generic version of the multiple errands test for severe acquired brain injuries
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Basagni, Benedetta, primary, Bosetti, Sara, additional, Cantelli, Sabrina, additional, Ermon, Silvia, additional, Rovere, Federica, additional, Navarrete, Eduardo, additional, De Tanti, Antonio, additional, and Saviola, Donatella, additional
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- 2021
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80. Some evidence on Gerstmann’s syndrome: A case study on a variant of the clinical disorder
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Basagni, Benedetta, Luzzatti, Claudio, De Tanti, Antonio, Bozzetti, Francesca, Crisi, Girolamo, Pinardi, Chiara, Errante, Antonino, and Fogassi, Leonardo
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- 2021
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81. A multicentre study of intentional behavioural responses measured using the Coma Recovery Scale-Revised in patients with minimally conscious state
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Estraneo, Anna, Moretta, Pasquale, Cardinale, Viviana, De Tanti, Antonio, Gatta, Giordano, Giacino, Joseph T, and Trojano, Luigi
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- 2015
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82. The importance of assessing parent stress in families with children with severe neuromotor and intellectual disability – a pilot study.
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De Gaetano, Katia, Saviola, Donatella, Brunetti, Domenica, and De Tanti, Antonio
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- 2022
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83. Rehabilitation in a rare case of coffin-siris syndrome with major cognitive and behavioural disorders
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Saviola, Donatella, primary, De Gaetano, Katia, additional, Galvani, Romina, additional, Bosetti, Sara, additional, Abbati, Paola, additional, Igharo, Vivian, additional, and De Tanti, Antonio, additional
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- 2021
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84. The importance of assessing parent stress in families with children with severe neuromotor and intellectual disability – a pilot study
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De Gaetano, Katia, primary, Saviola, Donatella, additional, Brunetti, Domenica, additional, and De Tanti, Antonio, additional
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- 2021
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85. User-centered practices in the eyes of informal caregivers of in-patients with severe acquired brain injury: needs, caring experience, and satisfaction
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Girardi, Giovanna, primary, Farnese, Maria Luisa, additional, Scarponi, Federico, additional, De Tanti, Antonio, additional, Bartolo, Michelangelo, additional, Intiso, Domenico, additional, Formisano, Rita, additional, and Antonucci, Gabriella, additional
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- 2021
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86. Sustained Axonal Degeneration in Prolonged Disorders of Consciousness
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Bagnato, Sergio, primary, D’Ippolito, Maria Enza, additional, Boccagni, Cristina, additional, De Tanti, Antonio, additional, Lucca, Lucia Francesca, additional, Nardone, Antonio, additional, Salucci, Pamela, additional, Fiorilla, Teresa, additional, Pingue, Valeria, additional, Gennaro, Serena, additional, Ursino, Maria, additional, Colombo, Valentina, additional, Barone, Teresa, additional, Rubino, Francesca, additional, and Andriolo, Maria, additional
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- 2021
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87. Predicting Outcome of Acquired Brain Injury by the Evolution of Paroxysmal Sympathetic Hyperactivity Signs
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Lucca, Lucia F., primary, De Tanti, Antonio, additional, Cava, Francesca, additional, Romoli, Annamaria, additional, Formisano, Rita, additional, Scarponi, Federico, additional, Estraneo, Anna, additional, Frattini, Diana, additional, Tonin, Paolo, additional, Bertolino, Chiara, additional, Salucci, Pamela, additional, Hakiki, Bahia, additional, D'Ippolito, Mariagrazia, additional, Zampolini, Mauro, additional, Masotta, Orsola, additional, Premoselli, Silvia, additional, Interlenghi, Matteo, additional, Salvatore, Christian, additional, Polidori, Annalisa, additional, and Cerasa, Antonio, additional
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- 2021
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88. Caregivers' engagement during in-hospital care of sABI's patients: Evaluation of informal co-production from the health providers' perspective
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Farnese, Girardi, Fida, Bivona, Bartolo, De Tanti, Intiso, Scarponi, and Antonucci
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acquired brain injury, co-production, health professionals, informal care - Abstract
One of the challenges of providing healthcare services is to enhance its value (for patients, staff and the service) by integrating the informal caregivers into the care process, both concretely managing their patient's health conditions and treatment (co-executing) and participating in the whole healthcare process (co-planning). This study aims at exploring the co-production contribution to the healthcare process, analysing whether and how it is related to higher caregivers’ satisfaction with service care and reduced staff burnout, in the eyes of the staff. It also investigated two pos- sible factors supporting caregivers in their role of co-producers, namely relationship among staff and informal caregivers related to knowledge sharing (i.e. an ability de- terminant supporting co-production) and related to role social conflict (i.e. a willing- ness determinant reducing co-production). Results of a structural equation model on a sample of 119 healthcare providers employed by neurorehabilitation centers in Italy with severe acquired brain injury confirmed that knowledge sharing positively related with caregivers’ co-executing and co-planning. Also, social role conflict was negatively related with co-executing but positively with co-planning. Furthermore, co-planning resulted in being unrelated to both outcomes, whereas co-executing was associated with caregivers’ satisfaction, as measured by staff perceptions. Overall, our data provided initial empirical evidence supporting the ability of the determi- nant's contribution in allowing informal caregivers to assume an active role in both co-production domains. Furthermore, as expected, the role of conflict willingness de- terminant was found to be a hindering factor for co-executing but, conversely, a trig- ger for co-planning. This result should be considered more carefully in future studies.en
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- 2021
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89. SECONDA CONFERENZA NAZIONALE DI CONSENSO DELLE ASSOCIAZIONI che rappresentato i familiari di persone in coma, stato vegetativo, minima coscienza e Gravi Cerebrolesioni Acquisite (GCA) DOCUMENTO CONCLUSIVO DELLA GIURIA
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De Nigris, Fulvio, Salvi, Gian Pietro, Fogar, Paolo, Piperno, Roberto, Vignatelli, Luca, Nonino, Francesco, Torrella, Ezio, Angelillo, Rosalba, Conforti, Eleonora, De Septis, Elisabetta, Fini, Teresa, Furlanetto, Nilo, Cannoni, Ivana, Scarponi, Giuseppe, Rossetto, Antonietta Rossana, Uva, Domenica, Verdini, Ramona, Chiarini, Alessandro, Angelillo, Maria Teresa, Pivetta, Giancarlo, Guya Devalle, Michelutti, Alessandro, Piedepalumbo, Anna, Ereno, Antonio, Intiso, Domenico, Di Girolamo, Elena, Feller, Sandro, Villa, Elena, Diverio, Manuela, Corsolini, Claudia, Solinas, Azzurra, Saviola, Donatella, Beinat, Michele, Casanova, Emanuela, Ferri, Andrea, Magni, Elisabetta, Lucca, Lucia Francesca, Carolei, Camilla, Salucci, Pamela, Neri, Anna, Battistini, Alberto, Scarponi, Federico, Di Gioia, Annalisa, Noro, Fulvia, Monti, Andrea, La Porta, Fabio, Bivona, Umberto, Castellani, Giovanna Barbara, Colombo, Valentina, Provenzale, Carlo, Inzaghi, Maria Grazia, Dolci, Simona, Focardi, Elisa, Fossati, Marina, Maggio, Claudia, Messuti, Roberto, Sozzi, Matteo, Stefoni, Ester, Valota, Chiara, Di Santantonio, Anna, Perini, Paola, Corrado, Giovanna, Di Stefano, Cristina, Sorace, Barbara, Cameli, Olivia, Martelli, Sonia, Bonaiuti, Donatella, Borromei, Fulvio, Canestrari, Stefano, De Tanti, Antonio, Estraneo, Anna, Falabella, Vincenzo, Formisano, Rita, Griffo, Giampiero, Leonardi, Matilde, Mazza, Luigi, Mazzucchi, Anna, Moscato, Giampiero, Orta, Averardo, Nazaro Pagano, Pavarelli, Marilena, Podda, Laura, Zampolini, Mauro, Tubertini, Mario, and Group, On Behalf Of The Movement Disorder Society Multiple System Atrophy Study
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- 2021
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90. User-centered practices in the eyes of informal caregivers of in-patients with severe acquired brain injury: needs, caring experience, and satisfaction
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Rita Formisano, Giovanna Girardi, Antonio De Tanti, Gabriella Antonucci, Domenico Intiso, Michelangelo Bartolo, Federico Scarponi, and Maria Luisa Farnese
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Service (business) ,genetic structures ,Communication ,Neuroscience (miscellaneous) ,Personal Satisfaction ,Need satisfaction ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,body regions ,Caregivers ,Nursing ,Patient Satisfaction ,Brain Injuries ,Social needs ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Healthcare process ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Observational study ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology ,Acquired brain injury ,Neurorehabilitation ,caregiver ,informal in-hospital care ,severe acquired brain injury (sABI) ,family needs ,healthcare value co-production - Abstract
OBJECTIVE This study examines the perceived needs, experience, and satisfaction of informal caregivers (ICGs) in in-hospital settings, related to their involvement in the design and delivery of services together with hospital staff, namely co-production. DESIGN To obtain a picture of current ICG-staff relationship, a multicenter observational study was carried out. Participants were 75 ICGs recruited in five dedicated in-patient neurorehabilitation wards. Participants answered a self-report questionnaire tapping perceived information/communication needs, emotional/social needs, and their satisfaction; family-centered practices implemented by the staff (namely involving practices and cooperative communication); and ICGs' satisfaction with the service. RESULTS Need satisfaction related positively to staff practices aimed at involving IGCs in treatment and training, but not in decision-making. Involving practices concerning treatment also related positively to ICGs' information/communication needs. In addition, the more the staff involved ICGs in decision-making and promoted cooperative communication regarding treatment, the more ICGs felt that their collaboration in the healthcare process was valuable. Finally, all involvement practices and cooperative communication were positively related to ICGs' overall satisfaction with the service. CONCLUSION The results of the study help to identify gaps in meeting ICGs' needs and to promote strategies to implement family participation toward co-production in in-hospital settings.
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- 2021
91. Identifying clinical complexity in patients affected by severe acquired brain injury in neurorehabilitation: a cross sectional survey
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Scarponi F., Zampolini M., Zucchella C., Bargellesi S., Fassio C., Pistoia F., Bartolo M, Raggi R, Beatrici M, Macchetta C, Cocchini L, Benedetti A, Bianconi F, Bramanti P, Marino S, Corallo F, Brambilla M, Carboncini M C., Spina V, Cervigni G, Cimenti F, Previaio C, Semerjian M, Colombari M, De Cicco D, De Tanti A, Iardella L, Diverio M), Grifoni C, Carl V, Pasqualone E, Estraneo A, Formisano R, Ciurli M P., Galardi M, Santangelo A, Giorgini T, Biasutti E, Iaia V, Intiso D, Lamberti G, Antoniono E, Lanfranchi M, Lavezzi S, Chiavaroli R, Lucca L F., Maggioni G, Mancuso M, Canova S, Mandala G, Melizza G, Montis A, Pilia F, Mulè C., Navarro J, Lanzillotti C, Perin C, Petrozzino S, Schierano G, Battistini A, Premoselli S, Salvi P, Simonini M, Sara M Pardo M, Serafini P, Fortuna R, Sergio M A., Volanti P, Scarponi, F, Zampolini, M, Zucchella, C, Bargellesi, S, Fassio, C, Pistoia, F, Bartolo, M, Raggi, R, Beatrici, M, Macchetta, C, Cocchini, L, Benedetti, A, Bianconi, F, Bramanti, P, Marino, S, Corallo, F, Brambilla, M, Carboncini M, C, Spina, V, Cervigni, G, Cimenti, F, Previaio, C, Semerjian, M, Colombari, M, De Cicco, D, De Tanti, A, Iardella, L, Diverio, M, Grifoni, C, Carl, V, Pasqualone, E, Estraneo, A, Formisano, R, Ciurli M, P, Galardi, M, Santangelo, A, Giorgini, T, Biasutti, E, Iaia, V, Intiso, D, Lamberti, G, Antoniono, E, Lanfranchi, M, Lavezzi, S, Chiavaroli, R, Lucca L, F, Maggioni, G, Mancuso, M, Canova, S, Mandala, G, Melizza, G, Montis, A, Pilia, F, Mulè, C, Navarro, J, Lanzillotti, C, Perin, C, Petrozzino, S, Schierano, G, Battistini, A, Premoselli, S, Salvi, P, Simonini, M, Sara, M, Serafini, P, Fortuna, R, Sergio M, A, and Volanti, P
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Patient admission ,Male ,030506 rehabilitation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cross-sectional study ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Glasgow Outcome Scale ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Comorbidity ,Brain injuries ,Rehabilitation Centers ,Brain injurie ,Disability Evaluation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Acute care ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Paroxysmal sympathetic hyperactivity ,Acquired brain injury ,Neurorehabilitation ,Cross-Sectional Studie ,Rehabilitation Center ,Inpatients ,Health Services Needs and Demand ,education.field_of_study ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,Neurological Rehabilitation ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Brain Injuries ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Physical therapy ,Inpatient ,0305 other medical science ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Human - Abstract
Background Literature shows that occurrence of comorbidities in people with severe acquired brain injury (sABI) is a common problem in rehabilitation stay. Consequently, patients could require an increase of interventions for diagnosis and treatment of clinical conditions, with a reduction of the rehabilitative take in charge for both clinical and organizational aspects. Aim The first aim was to evaluate the rate of clinical conditions of sABI patients at admission in rehabilitation and the types of rehabilitative interventions performed in the first week; second objective was to explore the impact of clinical conditions on real rehabilitative take in charge. Design Cross sectional study. Setting Inpatient rehabilitation centers. Population The study included data from 586 sABI patients. Methods Collected data regarded anamnestic information, functional status assessed by means of Glasgow Outcome Scale, Levels of cognitive functioning, Early Rehabilitation Barthel Index, comorbidities at admission and type of rehabilitative interventions carried out in first week of rehabilitation stay. Spearman correlation coefficients were applied to detect possible correlations between the number of treatments in first week and clinical variables; through a multiple regression analysis the effect of patient's characteristics on rehabilitative take in charge was explored. Results Data from the sABI patients: mean age 55.1±17.1 years; etiology of sABI was vascular in 315 patients (53.8%), anoxic in 83 (14.2%), neoplastic in 17 (2.9%), infectious in 15 (2.6%), traumatic in 150 (25.6%); 6 subjects (1%) presented a mixed etiology. Need of cardiorespiratory monitoring, pressure sores, infections or presence of multi drug resistant bacteria were the most frequent comorbidities. Passive mobilization, sitting positioning, arousal/awareness stimulation, evaluation and management of dysphagia were the interventions most frequently carried out in the first week. The regression analysis showed that severe neurological and clinical conditions, acute organ failure, cardio-respiratory instability and paroxysmal sympathetic hyperactivity significantly limit access to rehabilitative sessions. Conclusions In sABI patients clinical comorbidities requiring elevated care assistance are frequent at admission in rehabilitation from acute wards and may interfere with rehabilitative take in charge. Clinical rehabilitation impact The knowledge of clinical complexity of sABI patients may improve their care pathways, promoting early and appropriate transition from acute care to rehabilitation settings.
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- 2019
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92. Cognitive reserve index and functional and cognitive outcomes in severe acquired brain injury: A pilot study.
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Bertoni, Debora, Petraglia, Federica, Basagni, Benedetta, Pedrazzi, Giuseppe, De Gaetano, Katia, Costantino, Cosimo, and De Tanti, Antonio
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Many variables affect outcome after brain injury. Cognitive reserve (CR) is a subjective factor that reflects a set of personal characteristics and that differentiates individuals. It may influence an individual's capacity to react to brain injury. To study the effects of cognitive reserve on functional and cognitive outcome at the end of rehabilitation, in patients with severe acquired brain injury (sABI), by means of the Cognitive Reserve Index questionnaire (CRIq). We report a retrospective study of a continuous series of sABI patients on first admission to a rehabilitation center. Disability and cognitive outcomes were recorded. In the 94 patients enrolled, the assessments after rehabilitation showed a significant gain measured with the disability Rating Scale for patients with a higher CR (CRIq≥ 85). A significant negative correlation was found: between CRIq scores and the interval elapsing before first access to neuropsychological assessment, between CRIq scores, especially level of education, and tests that measure the same domain (attention). Improvements in overall and cognitive disability emerged, but CR did not seem to substantially influence outcome in this sample of patients. This result may be partly due to the clinical severity of the population studied and the sample's dimension, although quantitatively representative of the population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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93. Role of vehicle assistive devices for safe return to driving after severe acquired brain injury
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Raffaella Benoldi, Francesco Baldari, Gerardo Malangone, Antonio De Tanti, Giuseppe Pedrazzi, Paola Abbati, Donatella Saviola, Claudio Martini, and Maria Grazia Inzaghi
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Adult ,Male ,Automobile Driving ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Visual impairment ,Population ,Poison control ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Occupational safety and health ,Young Adult ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Humans ,Disabled Persons ,education ,Self-Help Devices ,Acquired brain injury ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,education.field_of_study ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,Recovery of Function ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Brain Injuries ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Background Driving is a complex activity that requires a wide range of cognitive, behavioral, sensory and motor competences that are often impaired in cases of severe acquired brain injury (sABI). A safe return to driving is an objective significantly correlated with recovery of personal independence and social-occupational role. Aim The study investigated elements predictive of the possibility of a safe return to driving after sABI, concentrating on motor disability and the need to prescribe vehicle assistive devices. Design Retrospective study. Setting Out-patients of a rehabilitation center for sABI. Population A series of 217 patients with stable sABI, well reintegrated at family and social level, were enrolled between January 2006 and June 2019. Methods The subjects were assessed for residual competences. Those who passed assessment of cognitive-behavioral and visual impairment were assessed for motor disability and the need for vehicle assistive devices to enable a safe return to driving. Results About 79% of the population were judged suitable for a return to driving. More than 50% of the latter were only able to return to driving with the aid of vehicle assistive devices. Etiological and demographic variables were not predictive of assessment outcome, whereas the various Griffith motor disability categories were correlated with need for vehicle assistive devices, which are most needed in non-traumatic subjects. Conclusions Although the literature on return to driving after brain injury focuses mainly on cognitive-behavioral impairment, in a significant percentage of cases it is also necessary to carefully analyse and manage motor disabilities that may result from sABI. Clinical rehabilitation impact Evaluation of the competences necessary for a return to driving after sABI requires a multiprofessional team that must also assess motor disability and know the possible vehicle assistive devices that can enable most candidates to overcome the limits imposed by their disability.
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- 2020
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94. The Skin ultrasound in systemic sclerosis patients: an update
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Barbara Ruaro, Antonio De Tanti, and Annamaria Iagnocco
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Clinical Practice ,medicine.medical_specialty ,integumentary system ,Skin impairment ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,medicine ,Radiology ,business ,High frequency ultrasound - Abstract
Although there has been an increase in the use of skin high frequency ultrasound for the evaluation of dermal thickness and skin impairment in systemic sclerosis, its role is still under debate and its use has not yet been fully validated. Herein we discuss the recent data from research and clinical practice on methods for sonographic evaluation of dermal thickness in systemic sclerosis.
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- 2020
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95. 'Less is more': validation with Rasch analysis of five short- forms for the Brain Injury Rehabilitation Trust Personality Questionnaires (BIRT-PQs)
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Pellicciari, L, Piscitelli, D, Basagni, B, De Tanti, A, Algeri, L, Caselli, S, Ciurli, M, Conforti, J, Estraneo, A, Moretta, P, Gambini, M, Inzaghi, M, Lamberti, G, Mancuso, M, Rinaldesi, M, Sozzi, M, Abbruzzese, L, Zettin, M, La Porta, F, Ciurli, MP, Gambini, MG, Inzaghi, MG, Rinaldesi, ML, Pellicciari, L, Piscitelli, D, Basagni, B, De Tanti, A, Algeri, L, Caselli, S, Ciurli, M, Conforti, J, Estraneo, A, Moretta, P, Gambini, M, Inzaghi, M, Lamberti, G, Mancuso, M, Rinaldesi, M, Sozzi, M, Abbruzzese, L, Zettin, M, La Porta, F, Ciurli, MP, Gambini, MG, Inzaghi, MG, and Rinaldesi, ML
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Background: Previous analyses demonstrated a lack of unidimensionality, item redundancy, and substantial administrative burden for the Brain Injury Rehabilitation Trust Personality Questionnaires (BIRT-PQs). Objective: To use Rasch Analysis to calibrate five short-forms of the BIRT-PQs, satisfying the Rasch model requirements. Methods: BIRT-PQs data from 154 patients with severe Acquired Brain Injury (s-ABI) and their caregivers (total sample = 308) underwent Rasch analysis to examine their internal construct validity and reliability according to the Rasch model. Results: The base Rasch analyses did not show sufficient internal construct validity according to the Rasch model for all five BIRT-PQs. After rescoring 18 items, and deleting 75 of 150 items, adequate internal construct validity was achieved for all five BIRT-PQs short forms (model chi-square p-values ranging from 0.0053 to 0.6675), with reliability values compatible with individual measurements. Conclusions: After extensive modifications, including a 48% reduction of the item load, we obtained five short forms of the BIRT-PQs satisfying the strict measurement requirements of the Rasch model. The ordinal-to-interval measurement conversion tables allow measuring on the same metric the perception of the neurobehavioral disability for both patients with s-ABI and their caregivers.
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- 2020
96. Multi-center observational study on occurrence and related clinical factors of neurogenic heterotopic ossification in patients with disorders of consciousness
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Estraneo, A, primary, Pascarella, A, additional, Masotta, O, additional, Bartolo, M, additional, Pistoia, F, additional, Perin, C, additional, Marino, S, additional, Lucca, L, additional, Pingue, V, additional, Casanova, E, additional, Romoli, AM, additional, Gentile, S, additional, Formisano, R, additional, Salvi, GP, additional, Scarponi, F, additional, De Tanti, A, additional, Bongioanni, P, additional, Rossato, E, additional, Santangelo, A, additional, Diana, AR, additional, Gambarin, M, additional, Intiso, D, additional, Antenucci, R, additional, Premoselli, S, additional, Bertoni, M, additional, and Trojano, L, additional
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- 2021
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97. What is done is not always what should be done: Results of an Italian survey on management of cranioplasty in neurorehabilitation
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Rita Formisano, Anna Estraneo, Antonio De Tanti, and Fabio La Porta
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Physical therapy ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Cranioplasty ,Neurorehabilitation - Published
- 2021
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98. Wisconsin card sorting test: a new global score, with Italian norms, and its relationship with the Weigl sorting test
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Laiacona, M., Inzaghi, M.G., De Tanti, A., and Capitani, E.
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- 2000
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99. VRT (verbal reasoning test): a new test for assessment of verbal reasoning. Test realization and Italian normative data from a multicentric study
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Annarita Caiazzo, Luigi Trojano, Paola Gemignani, Gessica Scrocco, Eduardo Navarrete, Laura Giunchi, Mauro Mancuso, Maria Grazia Gambini, Benedetta Basagni, Renato Avesani, Claudio Luzzatti, Alessio Damora, Antonio De Tanti, Marina Caputo, Basagni, B, Luzzatti, C, Navarrete, E, Caputo, M, Scrocco, G, Damora, A, Giunchi, L, Gemignani, P, Caiazzo, A, Gambini, M, Avesani, R, Mancuso, M, Trojano, L, de Tanti, A, Basagni, Benedetta, Luzzatti, Claudio, Navarrete, Eduardo, Caputo, Marina, Scrocco, Gessica, Damora, Alessio, Giunchi, Laura, Gemignani, Paola, Caiazzo, Annarita, Gambini, Maria Grazia, Avesani, Renato, Mancuso, Mauro, Trojano, Luigi, and de Tanti, Antonio
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Male ,Pilot Projects ,Audiology ,Developmental psychology ,Thinking ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reference Values ,Italian normative data ,Raw score ,Brain injury ,05 social sciences ,Linear model ,Age Factors ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Verbal reasoning ,Test (assessment) ,Assessment ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Brain Injuries ,Educational Status ,Female ,Humans ,Italy ,Linear Models ,Speech ,Young Adult ,Psychological Tests ,Speech Perception ,2708 ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychiatry and Mental Health ,Psychology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Speech perception ,Dermatology ,Standard score ,M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Neuropsychology ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychological testing ,Normative ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Verbal reasoning is a complex, multicomponent function, which involves activation of functional processes and neural circuits distributed in both brain hemispheres. Thus, this ability is often impaired after brain injury. The aim of the present study is to describe the construction of a new verbal reasoning test (VRT) for patients with brain injury and to provide normative values in a sample of healthy Italian participants. Three hundred and eighty healthy Italian subjects (193 women and 187 men) of different ages (range 16–75 years) and educational level (primary school to postgraduate degree) underwent the VRT. VRT is composed of seven subtests, investigating seven different domains. Multiple linear regression analysis revealed a significant effect of age and education on the participants’ performance in terms of both VRT total score and all seven subtest scores. No gender effect was found. A correction grid for raw scores was built from the linear equation derived from the scores. Inferential cut-off scores were estimated using a non-parametric technique, and equivalent scores were computed. We also provided a grid for the correction of results by z scores.
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- 2017
100. Multi-center study on overall clinical complexity of patients with prolonged disorders of consciousness of different etiologies
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Estraneo, A, primary, Masotta, O, additional, Bartolo, M, additional, Pistoia, F, additional, Perin, C, additional, Marino, S, additional, Lucca, L, additional, Pingue, V, additional, Casanova, E, additional, Romoli, A, additional, Gentile, S, additional, Formisano, R, additional, Salvi, GP, additional, Scarponi, F, additional, De Tanti, A, additional, Bongioanni, P, additional, Rossato, E, additional, Santangelo, A, additional, Diana, AR, additional, Gambarin, M, additional, Intiso, D, additional, Antenucci, R, additional, Premoselli, S, additional, Bertoni, M, additional, and De Bellis, F, additional
- Published
- 2020
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