472 results on '"Rodriguez, Guido"'
Search Results
202. Regional blood flow in boxers
- Author
-
Rodriguez, Guido, Ferrillo, F, Montano, V, Rosadini, G, and Sannita, Wg
- Published
- 1983
203. Lack of EEG modifications during prolonged acoustic stimulation in man: a computer analysis
- Author
-
Rodriguez, Guido, Baccelliere, L, Montano, Vf, and Rosadini, G.
- Published
- 1981
204. Statistical studies of the consumption of psychotropic drugs in an urban community]
- Author
-
Rodriguez, Guido, Bruzzone, M, Gasparetto, B, Montano, V, and Rosadini, G.
- Published
- 1978
205. Correlates of adaptation to the sleep laboratory. Behavior, sleep organization, quantitative EEG
- Author
-
Rosadini, G, Consoli, D, Ferrillo, F, Rodriguez, Guido, Sannita, Wg, and Silvestro, C.
- Published
- 1983
206. [Comparative intra-and inter-hemispheric analysis of EEG activity in intracranial tumoral pathology]
- Author
-
Cavazza, B, Gasparetto, B, Rivano, C, Rodriguez, Guido, and Rosadini, G.
- Published
- 1974
207. Correlazione fra indici liquorali del metabolismo cerebrale e spettro di potenza dell'EEG nel coma profondo verso la morte cerebrale
- Author
-
Zattoni, J, Fritz, D, Giasotto, G, Morando, V, Siani, C, and Rodriguez, Guido
- Published
- 1971
208. ACUTE ALCOHOLIC POISONING IN MAN: AN EXPERIMENTAL ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL STUDY
- Author
-
Rosadini, G, Rodriguez, Guido, and Siani, C.
- Published
- 1974
209. Analysis of spontaneus and evoked cerebral electrical activity in deep coma and 'cerebral death'
- Author
-
Ferrillo, F, Giunta, F, Rivano, C, Rodriguez, Guido, Rosadini, G, Rossi, G. F., Sannita, W, Siani, C, Tuvella, G, and Zattoni, J.
- Published
- 1969
210. Evoked cerebral responses to visual and somatic stimuli in subjects with familial myoclonus epilepsy. Effects of a new benzodiacepine
- Author
-
Giunta, F, Rivano, C, Rodriguez, Guido, Rossi, Gf, and Turella, G.
- Published
- 1969
211. Acute alcohol poisoning in man: An experimental electrophysiological study
- Author
-
Rosadini, Guido, primary, Rodriguez, Guido, additional, and Siani, Clelia, additional
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
212. Common carotid wall thickening and ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in hypertensive patients
- Author
-
Barone, Cesare, Nobili, Flavio, Musso, Natale, De Iorgi, Vincenza, Grosso, Daniele, Lotti, Gaetano, and Rodriguez, Guido
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
213. Impact of the application of an abbreviated weaning protocol in obese patients under mechanical ventilation
- Author
-
Reyes, Alex Gustavo Tamayo, Fernandez, Brenda Lupe Fernandez, Felipez, Tania Carla Huanca, Wilches, Marcos Aurelio Teheran, Vasquez, Jhimmy Jose Morales, Espino, Romulo Garnica, Sanchez, Felipe Carvajal, Rodriguez, Guido Fernando Montalvo, and Sakugawa, Maria Julia
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
214. Nonprogrammed extubation, case and control study: Incidence and related variables to improve quality in a polyvalent unit
- Author
-
Reyes, Alex Gustavo Tamayo, Montalvo Rodriguez, Guido Fernando, Espino, Romulo Garnica, Fernandez, Brenda Lupe Fernandez, Felipez, Tania Carla Huanca, Morales Vasquez, Jhimmy Jose, Sanchez, Felipe Carvajal, and Wilches, Marcos Aurelio Teheran
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
215. Integrating high-resolution remote sensing and empirical wildlife detection data for climate-resilient corridors across tropical elevational gradients.
- Author
-
McCullough, Ian M., Beirne, Christopher, Soto-Navarro, Carolina, Eppert, Amy, Flatt, Eleanor, Kemp, Yvonne J.M., Molnár, Péter K., Mooring, Michael S., Nikolova, Yana, Olson, Erik R., Pinto, Carolina, Porras, Junior, Quirós, María José Mata, Rodriguez, Guido Saborío, Schipper, Jan, Tellez, Chelsey R., Vargas Soto, Juan S., and Whitworth, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
FRAGMENTED landscapes , *PROTECTED areas , *REMOTE sensing , *CONSERVATION & restoration , *FUNCTIONAL connectivity , *CORRIDORS (Ecology) - Abstract
Corridors are essential tools for promoting biodiversity resilience under climate change. However, corridor design studies are often conducted at spatial scales too coarse to guide implementation by local conservation practitioners. We mapped potential climate-resilient corridors linking lowland to highland protected areas within a highly biodiverse but fragmented landscape of southwestern Costa Rica (6311 km2) using least cost path and circuit theory approaches at high spatial resolution (10 m). We then applied an extensive camera trap dataset of medium-large vertebrates to examine corridor functionality. Although least cost paths (n = 40) were predominantly forested (median = 76 %, range = 57–82 %) and somewhat protected (median = 31 %, range = 3–55 %), they were also highly fragmented. Least cost paths from lowland to highland protected areas traversed medians of 252 forest patches (range = 162–328), 11,186 agriculture patches (range = 822–1,771), and 106 roads (range = 50–252), translating to 2 forest patches, 11 agriculture patches, and 1 road crossed every kilometer. Circuit analyses identified many high-connectivity areas outside of protected areas, including but not limited to least cost paths, but these high-connectivity areas were mostly small forest fragments. Nonetheless, capture rates for medium-to-large mammals at camera traps indicated that many species are currently unlikely to use unprotected, fragmented areas thought to be important for connectivity. In other words, additional conservation and restoration are necessary to establish functional corridors within the landscape. More broadly, this study exemplifies an approach to bridging the gap between regional-scale connectivity analyses and the needs of local practitioners by identifying locations that could be targeted for conservation or restoration within multi-use tropical landscapes. • We mapped potential corridors for medium-large vertebrates at 10 m resolution • Analysis took place across a 3240 m elevational gradient in southwestern Costa Rica • Corridors were to some extent protected but highly fragmented by farms and roads • Evidence of functional connectivity was stronger for generalist species • A high-resolution approach is beneficial for locally actionable conservation [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
216. Principal component analysis in mild and moderate Alzheimer's disease — A novel approach to clinical diagnosis
- Author
-
Pagani, Marco, Salmaso, Dario, Rodriguez, Guido, Nardo, Davide, and Nobili, Flavio
- Subjects
- *
ALZHEIMER'S disease , *DIAGNOSIS , *TOMOGRAPHY , *HIPPOCAMPUS (Brain) - Abstract
Abstract: Principal component analysis (PCA) provides a method to explore functional brain connectivity. The aim of this study was to identify regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) distribution differences between Alzheimer''s disease (AD) patients and controls (CTR) by means of volume of interest (VOI) analysis and PCA. Thirty-seven CTR, 30 mild AD (mildAD) and 27 moderate AD (modAD) subjects were investigated using single photon emission computed tomography with 99mTc-hexamethylpropylene amine oxime. Analysis of covariance (ANCOVA), PCA, and discriminant analysis (DA) were performed on 54 VOIs. VOI analysis identified in both mildAD and modAD subjects a decreased rCBF in six regions. PCA in mildAD subjects identified four principal components (PCs) in which the correlated VOIs showed a decreased level of rCBF, including regions that are typically affected early in the disease. In five PCs, including parietal-temporal-limbic cortex, and hippocampus, a significantly lower rCBF in correlated VOIs was found in modAD subjects. DA significantly discriminated the groups. The percentage of subjects correctly classified was 95, 70, and 81 for CTR, mildAD and modAD groups, respectively. PCA highlighted, in mildAD and modAD, relationships not evident when brain regions are considered as independent of each other, and it was effective in discriminating groups. These findings may allow neurophysiological inferences to be drawn regarding brain functional connectivity in AD that might not be possible with univariate analysis. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
217. Eeg effects and plasma concentrations of phenobarbital in volunteers
- Author
-
Sannita, Walter G., Rapallino, Maria V., Rodriguez, Guido, and Rosadini, Guido
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
218. Cortical sources of resting state electroencephalographic alpha rhythms deteriorate across time in subjects with amnesic mild cognitive impairment.
- Author
-
Babiloni, Claudio, Del Percio, Claudio, Lizio, Roberta, Marzano, Nicola, Infarinato, Francesco, Soricelli, Andrea, Salvatore, Elena, Ferri, Raffaele, Bonforte, Cinzia, Tedeschi, Gioacchino, Montella, Patrizia, Baglieri, Annalisa, Rodriguez, Guido, Famà, Francesco, Nobili, Flavio, Vernieri, Fabrizio, Ursini, Francesca, Mundi, Ciro, Frisoni, Giovanni B., and Rossini, Paolo M.
- Subjects
- *
MILD cognitive impairment , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *AMNESIA , *MAGNETIC induction tomography , *COST effectiveness , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Abstract: Cortical sources of resting state electroencephalographic (EEG) rhythms are abnormal in subjects with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Here, we tested the hypothesis that these sources in amnesic MCI subjects further deteriorate over 1 year. To this aim, the resting state eyes-closed EEG data were recorded in 54 MCI subjects at baseline (Mini Mental State Examination I = 26.9; standard error [SE], 0.2) and at approximately 1-year follow-up (13.8 months; SE, 0.5; Mini Mental State Examination II = 25.8; SE, 0.2). As a control, EEG recordings were also performed in 45 normal elderly and in 50 mild Alzheimer's disease subjects. EEG rhythms of interest were delta (2–4 Hz), theta (4–8 Hz), alpha1 (8–10.5 Hz), alpha2 (10.5–13 Hz), beta1 (13–20 Hz), and beta2 (20–30 Hz). Cortical EEG sources were estimated using low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography. Compared with the normal elderly and mild Alzheimer's disease subjects, the MCI subjects were characterized by an intermediate power of posterior alpha1 sources. In the MCI subjects, the follow-up EEG recordings showed a decreased power of posterior alpha1 and alpha2 sources. These results suggest that the resting state EEG alpha sources were sensitive—at least at the group level—to the cognitive decline occurring in the amnesic MCI group over 1 year, and might represent cost-effective, noninvasive and widely available markers to follow amnesic MCI populations in large clinical trials. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
219. Brain perfusion correlates of cognitive and nigrostriatal functions in de novo Parkinson's disease.
- Author
-
Nobili, Flavio, Arnaldi, Dario, Campus, Claudio, Ferrara, Michela, Carli, Fabrizio, Brugnolo, Andrea, Dessi, Barbara, Girtler, Nicola, Morbelli, Silvia, Abruzzese, Giovanni, Sambuceti, Gianmario, and Rodriguez, Guido
- Subjects
- *
PARKINSON'S disease , *BRAIN diseases , *MEMORY , *POSITRON emission tomography , *PERFUSION - Abstract
Purpose: Subtle cognitive impairment is recognized in the first stages of Parkinson's disease (PD), including executive, memory and visuospatial dysfunction, but its pathophysiological basis is still debated. Methods: Twenty-six consecutive, drug-naïve, de novo PD patients underwent an extended neuropsychological battery, dopamine transporter (DAT) and brain perfusion single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). We previously reported that nigrocaudate impairment correlates with executive functions, and nigroputaminal impairment with visuospatial abilities. Here perfusion SPECT was first compared between the PD group and age-matched controls (CTR). Then, perfusion SPECT was correlated with both DAT SPECT and four neuropsychological factors by means of voxel-based analysis (SPM8) with a height threshold of p < 0.005 at peak level and p < 0.05 false discovery rate-corrected at cluster level. Both perfusion and DAT SPECT images were flipped in order to have the more affected hemisphere (MAH), defined clinically, on the same side. Results: Significant hypoperfusion was found in an occipital area of the MAH in PD patients as compared to CTR. Executive functions directly correlated with brain perfusion in bilateral posterior cingulate cortex and precuneus in the less affected hemisphere (LAH), while verbal memory directly correlated with perfusion in the precuneus, inferior parietal lobule and superior temporal gyrus in the LAH. Furthermore, positive correlation was highlighted between nigrocaudate and nigroputaminal impairment and brain perfusion in the precuneus, posterior cingulate and parahippocampal gyri of the LAH. Conclusion: These data support the evidence showing an early involvement of the cholinergic system in the early cognitive dysfunction and point to a more relevant role of parietal lobes and posterior cingulate in executive functions in PD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
220. Radionuclide brain imaging correlates of cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease (PD)
- Author
-
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
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
221. Stability of clinical condition in mild cognitive impairment is related to cortical sources of alpha rhythms: An electroencephalographic study.
- Author
-
Babiloni, Claudio, Frisoni, Giovanni B., Vecchio, Fabrizio, Lizio, Roberta, Pievani, Michela, Cristina, Geroldi, Fracassi, Claudia, Vernieri, Fabrizio, Rodriguez, Guido, Nobili, Flavio, Ferri, Raffaele, and Rossini, Paolo M.
- Abstract
Previous evidence has shown that resting eyes-closed cortical alpha rhythms are higher in amplitude in mild cognitive impairment (MCI) than Alzheimer's disease (AD) subjects (Babiloni et al. [2006a]: Human Brain Mapp 27:162-172; [2006b]: Clin Neurophysiol 117:252-268; [2006c]: Neuroimage 29:948-964; [2006d]: Ann Neurol 59:323-334; [2006e]: Clin Neurophysiol 117:1113-1129; [2006f]: Neuroimage 31:1650-1665). This study tested the hypothesis that, in amnesic MCI subjects, high amplitude of baseline cortical alpha rhythms is related to long-term stability of global cognition on clinical follow-up. Resting electroencephalographic (EEG) data were recorded in 100 amnesic MCI subjects during eyes-closed condition. EEG rhythms of interest were delta (2-4 Hz), theta (4-8 Hz), alpha1 (8-10.5 Hz), alpha2 (10.5-13 Hz), beta1 (13-20 Hz), and beta2 (20-30 Hz). Cortical EEG sources were estimated by low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (LORETA). Global cognition was indexed by mini mental state evaluation (MMSE) score at the time of EEG recordings (baseline) and about after 1 year. Based on the MMSE percentage difference between baseline and 1-year follow-up (MMSEvar), the MCI subjects were retrospectively divided into three arbitrary groups: DECREASED (MMSEvar ≤ −4%; N = 43), STABLE (MMSEvar ≈ 0; N = 27), and INCREASED (MMSEvar ≥ +4%; N = 30). Subjects' age, education, individual alpha frequency, gender, and MMSE scores were used as covariates for statistical analysis. Baseline posterior cortical sources of alpha 1 rhythms were higher in amplitude in the STABLE than in the DECREASED and INCREASED groups. These results suggest that preserved resting cortical neural synchronization at alpha frequency is related to a long-term (1 year) stable cognitive function in MCI subjects. Future studies should use serial MMSE measurements to confirm and refine the present results. Hum Brain Mapp, 2011. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
222. Local MRI analysis approach in the diagnosis of early and prodromal Alzheimer's disease
- Author
-
Chincarini, Andrea, Bosco, Paolo, Calvini, Piero, Gemme, Gianluca, Esposito, Mario, Olivieri, Chiara, Rei, Luca, Squarcia, Sandro, Rodriguez, Guido, Bellotti, Roberto, Cerello, Piergiorgio, De Mitri, Ivan, Retico, Alessandra, and Nobili, Flavio
- Subjects
- *
ALZHEIMER'S disease diagnosis , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging of the brain , *TEMPORAL lobe , *ATROPHY , *BIOMARKERS , *FOLLOW-up studies (Medicine) , *SUPPORT vector machines , *MILD cognitive impairment - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Medial temporal lobe (MTL) atrophy is one of the key biomarkers to detect early neurodegenerative changes in the course of Alzheimer''s disease (AD). There is active research aimed at identifying automated methodologies able to extract accurate classification indexes from T1-weighted magnetic resonance images (MRI). Such indexes should be fit for identifying AD patients as early as possible. Subjects: A reference group composed of 144AD patients and 189 age-matched controls was used to train and test the procedure. It was then applied on a study group composed of 302 MCI subjects, 136 having progressed to clinically probable AD (MCI-converters) and 166 having remained stable or recovered to normal condition after a 24month follow-up (MCI-non converters). All subjects came from the ADNI database. Methods: We sampled the brain with 7 relatively small volumes, mainly centered on the MTL, and 2 control regions. These volumes were filtered to give intensity and textural MRI-based features. Each filtered region was analyzed with a Random Forest (RF) classifier to extract relevant features, which were subsequently processed with a Support Vector Machine (SVM) classifier. Once a prediction model was trained and tested on the reference group, it was used to compute a classification index (CI) on the MCI cohort and to assess its accuracy in predicting AD conversion in MCI patients. The performance of the classification based on the features extracted by the whole 9 volumes is compared with that derived from each single volume. All experiments were performed using a bootstrap sampling estimation, and classifier performance was cross-validated with a 20-fold paradigm. Results: We identified a restricted set of image features correlated with the conversion to AD. It is shown that most information originate from a small subset of the total available features, and that it is enough to give a reliable assessment. We found multiple, highly localized image-based features which alone are responsible for the overall clinical diagnosis and prognosis. The classification index is able to discriminate Controls from AD with an Area Under Curve (AUC)=0.97 (sensitivity ≃89% at specificity ≃94%) and Controls from MCI-converters with an AUC=0.92 (sensitivity ≃89% at specificity ≃80%). MCI-converters are separated from MCI-non converters with AUC=0.74(sensitivity ≃72% at specificity ≃65%). Findings: The present automated MRI-based technique revealed a strong relationship between highly localized baseline-MRI features and the baseline clinical assessment. In addition, the classification index was also used to predict the probability of AD conversion within a time frame of two years. The definition of a single index combining local analysis of several regions can be useful to detect AD neurodegeneration in a typical MCI population. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
223. Electroencephalographic Rhythms in Alzheimer's Disease.
- Author
-
Lizio, Roberta, Vecchio, Fabrizio, Frisoni, Giovanni B., Ferri, Raffaele, Rodriguez, Guido, and Babiloni, Claudio
- Published
- 2011
224. Phosphorylation of APP-CTF-AICD domains and interaction with adaptor proteins: signal transduction and/or transcriptional role - relevance for Alzheimer pathology.
- Author
-
Schettini, Gennaro, Govoni, Stefano, Racchi, Marco, and Rodriguez, Guido
- Subjects
- *
PHOSPHORYLATION , *GENETIC transduction , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *PATHOLOGY , *PROTEOLYTIC enzymes , *CHEMICAL reactions , *PHOSPHORYLASES - Abstract
In recent decades, the study of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) and of its proteolytic products carboxy terminal fragment (CTF), APP intracellular C-terminal domain (AICD) and amyloid beta has been mostly focussed on the role of APP as a producer of the toxic amyloid beta peptide. Here, we reconsider the role of APP suggesting, in a provocative way, the protein as a central player in a putative signalling pathway. We highlight the presence in the cytosolic tail of APP of the YENPTY motif which is typical of tyrosine kinase receptors, the phosphorylation of the tyrosine, serine and threonine residues, the kinases involved and the interaction with intracellular adaptor proteins. In particular, we examine the interaction with Shc and Grb2 regulators, which through the activation of Ras proteins elicit downstream signalling events such as the MAPK pathway. The review also addresses the interaction of APP, CTFs and AICD with other adaptor proteins and in particular with Fe65 for nuclear transcriptional activity and the importance of phosphorylation for sorting the secretases involved in the amyloidogenic or non-amyloidogenic pathways. We provide a novel perspective on Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis, focussing on the perturbation of the physiological activities of APP-CTFs and AICD as an alternative perspective from that which normally focuses on the accumulation of neurotoxic proteolytic fragments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
225. Cortical sources of resting EEG rhythms in mild cognitive impairment and subjective memory complaint
- Author
-
Babiloni, Claudio, Visser, Pieter Jelle, Frisoni, Giovanni, De Deyn, Peter Paul, Bresciani, Lorena, Jelic, Vesna, Nagels, Guy, Rodriguez, Guido, Rossini, Paolo M., Vecchio, Fabrizio, Colombo, Danilo, Verhey, Frans, Wahlund, Lars-Olof, and Nobili, Flavio
- Subjects
- *
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *COGNITION disorders , *MEMORY disorders , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *TOMOGRAPHY , *DISEASES in older people , *OCCIPITAL lobe - Abstract
Abstract: Are cortical electroencephalographic (EEG) rhythms altered in amnesic and non-amnesic mild cognitive impairment (MCI), subjective memory complaint (SMC), and healthy elderly (Nold) subjects? Eyes-closed resting EEG was recorded in 79 Nold, 53 SMC, 51 non-amnesic MCI, and 92 amnesic MCI subjects. EEG rhythms of interest were delta (2–4Hz), theta (4–8Hz), alpha 1 (8–10.5Hz), alpha 2 (10.5–13Hz), beta 1 (13–20Hz), beta 2 (20–30Hz) and gamma (30–40Hz). Cortical EEG sources were estimated by standardized low resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (sLORETA). Results showed that (i) the frontal delta sources were greater in amplitude in the amnesic MCI and SMC subjects than in the Nold subjects (p <0.05–0.01); (ii) the parietal and occipital theta sources were lower in amplitude in the SMC subjects than in the Nold subjects (p <0.046); (iii) the occipital theta sources were greater in amplitude in the amnesic MCI subjects than in the SMC and non-amnesic MCI subjects (p <0.02–0.01); (iv) the parietal and occipital alpha 1 sources were greater in amplitude in the Nold subjects than in the SMC, non-amnesic MCI and amnesic MCI subjects (p <0.00001); (v) the central alpha 1 sources were lower in amplitude in the SMC subjects than in the non-amnesic MCI subjects (p <0.002); (vi) the occipital alpha 1 sources were greater in amplitude in the SMC subjects than in the amnesic MCI subjects (p <0.0003); (vii) the parietal and occipital alpha 2 sources were greater in amplitude in the Nold subjects than in the non-amnesic MCI subjects (p <0.041–0.0004); (viii) the occipital alpha 2 sources were greater in the SMC subjects than in the non-amnesic MCI subjects (p <0.02). These results suggest that amnesic MCI and SMC subjects present some of the typical alterations of brain neural synchronization as revealed by resting cortical EEG rhythms in Alzheimer''s disease patients. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
226. Impaired access to semantic memory for the cognition of geographic space in Alzheimer's disease
- Author
-
Mazzei, Debora, Brugnolo, Andrea, Dessi, Barbara, Girtler, Nicola, Famà, Francesco, Rizza, Elisa, Nobili, Flavio, and Rodriguez, Guido
- Subjects
- *
MEMORY , *COGNITION , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *NEURODEGENERATION , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *MINI-Mental State Examination , *FLUENCY (Language learning) , *SEMANTICS - Abstract
Abstract: This study explores the possibility to capitalize from a widely used semantic fluency test, in order to investigate aspects of topographical space representation, still poorly studied in neurodegenerative diseases. Twenty-six patients with mild Alzheimer''s disease (AD) and 13 healthy control (CTR) subjects underwent neuropsychological assessment at baseline (T0) and about 2 years later (T1). The cities named during category verbal fluency test (“names of cities”) were marked on a map, and the polygon perimeter obtained by joining the external points was computed. Mini-mental state examination (MMSE) score, number of cities named and perimeter length were compared between T0 and T1, both within-group and between groups. MMSE score and number of cities significantly differed between AD and CTR both at T0 and at T1; perimeter length differed significantly only at T1. Between T0 and T1, all the three parameters significantly decreased in AD, while they were substantially unchanged in CTR. Besides a reduction of semantic verbal fluency, there seems to be a ‘restriction’ of mental geographic space representation already in mild AD. These findings should be confirmed and exploited by further ad hoc investigations. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
227. Cognitive-nigrostriatal relationships in de novo, drug-naïve Parkinson's disease patients: A [I-123]FP-CIT SPECT study.
- Author
-
Nobili, Flavio, Campus, Claudio, Arnaldi, Dario, De Carli, Fabrizio, Cabassi, Gaia, Brugnolo, Andrea, Dessi, Barbara, Morbelli, Silvia, Sambuceti, Gianmario, Abbruzzese, Giovanni, and Rodriguez, Guido
- Abstract
To unveil cognitive-nigrostriatal correlations in Parkinson's disease (PD), 30 de novo, drug-naïve PD patients and 15 patients with essential tremor (Controls, CTR) underwent a neuropsychological (NPS) battery and brain SPECT with [I-123]Ioflupane, as a biomarker of nigrostriatal function. Automatic extraction of uptake at caudate and putamen level was conducted through the BasGan software, also allowing partial volume effect correction. Because of the multicollinearity among neuropsychological tests and among SPECT variables, factor analysis was applied to 16 neuropsychological scores; moreover, the four SPECT variables were merged into a mean SPECT value (mSPECT). Factor analysis identified four NPS factors: a dys-executive (NPS-EX), a visuospatial (NPS-VS), a verbal memory (NPS-VM), and a 'mixed' (NPD-MIX) factor. In PD group, there were inverse correlations between UPDRS-III score and both NPS-VS ( P < 0.01) and mSPECT ( P < 0.05), and a direct correlation between mSPECT and NPS-EX ( P < 0.05). Post hoc analysis showed a direct correlation between NPS-EX and caudate uptake in both hemispheres ( P < 0.05). Moreover, inverse correlations were found between UPDRS-III and, respectively, putamen uptake in the less affected hemisphere ( P < 0.01), and putamen and caudate uptake in the more affected hemisphere ( P < 0.05). In CTR, no correlation was found between mSPECT and either NPS or GDS values. Nigro-caudate function affects executive capabilities in PD but not in CTR, which appears to be unrelated to the disease motor severity at its onset. Instead, PD motor severity is related to nigro-putaminal impairment and visuospatial dysfunction. The role of these data as predictive features of cognitive decline and eventually dementia remains to be established in longitudinal studies. © 2010 Movement Disorder Society [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
228. Mapping brain morphological and functional conversion patterns in amnestic MCI: a voxel-based MRI and FDG-PET study.
- Author
-
Morbelli, Silvia, Piccardo, Arnoldo, Villavecchia, Giampiero, Dessi, Barbara, Brugnolo, Andrea, Piccini, Alessandra, Caroli, Anna, Frisoni, Giovanni, Rodriguez, Guido, and Nobili, Flavio
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL imaging systems , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging , *POSITRON emission tomography , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *BRAIN imaging - Abstract
To reveal the morphological and functional substrates of memory impairment and conversion to Alzheimer disease (AD) from the stage of amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI). Brain MRI and FDG-PET were performed in 20 patients with aMCI and 12 controls at baseline. During a mean follow-up of about 2 years, 9 patients developed AD (converters), and 11 did not (nonconverters). All images were processed with SPM2. FDG-PET and segmented grey matter (GM) images were compared in: (1) converters versus controls, (2) nonconverters versus controls, and (3) converters versus nonconverters. As compared to controls, converters showed lower GM density in the left parahippocampal gyrus and both thalami, and hypometabolism in the precuneus, posterior cingulate and superior parietal lobule in the left hemisphere. Hypometabolism was found in nonconverters as compared to controls in the left precuneus and posterior cingulated gyrus. As compared to nonconverters, converters showed significant hypometabolism in the left middle and superior temporal gyri. The discordant topography between atrophy and hypometabolism reported in AD is already present at the aMCI stage. Posterior cingulate–precuneus hypometabolism seemed to be an early sign of memory deficit, whereas hypometabolism in the left temporal cortex marked the conversion to AD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
229. Real-time artifact filtering in continuous VEPs/fMRI recording
- Author
-
Anwar, Muhammad Nabeel, Bonzano, Laura, Sebastiano, Davide Rossi, Roccatagliata, Luca, Gualniera, Giovanni, Vitali, Paolo, Ogliastro, Carla, Spadavecchia, Luciano, Rodriguez, Guido, Sanguineti, Vittorio, Morasso, Pietro, and Bandini, Fabio
- Subjects
- *
MAGNETIC resonance imaging of the brain , *OPTIC neuritis , *VISUAL evoked response , *VISUAL acuity , *ECHO-planar imaging , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *VISUAL cortex , *REAL-time control - Abstract
Abstract: Continuous recording of Visual Evoked Potentials (VEPs) and functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) exploits the VEPs high temporal resolution and the fMRI high spatial resolution. In this work, we present a new method of continuous VEPs/fMRI recording to study visual function in seven normal subjects. Our real-time artifact filtering is characterized by a procedure based on an analytical study of echo-planar imaging (EPI) sequence parameters related electro-encephalogram (EEG)-artifact shapes. The magnetic field artifacts were minimized by using a dedicated amagnetic device and by a subtraction algorithm that takes into account the EPI sequence parameters. No significant decrease in signal-to-noise ratio was observed in case of EEG recording simultaneously with MR acquisition; similarly, transient and steady-state VEPs parameters were comparable during fMRI acquisition and in the off-phase of fMRI recording. We also applied this method to one patient with optic neuritis, and, compared with controls, found different results. We suggest that our technique can be reliably used to investigate the function of human visual cortex and properly correlate the electrophysiological and functional neuroimaging related changes. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
230. Amnestic mild cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease: A brain perfusion SPECT study.
- Author
-
Nobili, Flavio, Abbruzzese, Giovanni, Morbelli, Silvia, Marchese, Roberta, Girtler, Nicola, Dessi, Barbara, Brugnolo, Andrea, Canepa, Cinzia, Drosos, Giorgos Chr., Sambuceti, Gianmario, and Rodriguez, Guido
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate cortical dysfunction in Parkinson's disease (PD) patients with amnestic deficit (PD-MCI). Perfusion single photon emission computed tomography was performed in 15 PD-MCI patients and compared (statistical parametric mapping [SPM2]) with three groups, i.e., healthy subjects (CTR), cognitively intact PD patients (PD), and common amnestic MCI patients (aMCI). Age, depression, and UPDRS-III scores were considered as confounding variables. PD-MCI group ( P < 0.05, false discovery rate-corrected for multiple comparisons) showed relative hypoperfusion in bilateral posterior parietal lobe and in right occipital lobe in comparison to CTR. As compared to aMCI, MCI-PD demonstrated hypoperfusion in bilateral posterior parietal and occipital areas, mainly right cuneus and angular gyrus, and left precuneus and middle occipital gyrus. With a less conservative threshold (uncorrected P < 0.01), MCI-PD showed hypoperfusion in a left parietal region, mainly including precuneus and inferior parietal lobule, and in a right temporal-parietal-occipital region, including middle occipital and superior temporal gyri, and cuneus-precuneus, as compared to PD. aMCI versus PD-MCI showed hypoperfusion in bilateral medial temporal lobe, anterior cingulate, and left orbitofrontal cortex. PD-MCI patients with amnestic deficit showed cortical dysfunction in bilateral posterior parietal and occipital lobes, a pattern that can be especially recognized versus both controls and common aMCI patients, and to a lesser extent versus cognitively intact PD. The relevance of this pattern in predicting dementia should be evaluated in longitudinal studies. © 2008 Movement Disorder Society [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
231. Traditional and non traditional risk factors in accelerated atherosclerosis in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus: Role of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGATS Study)
- Author
-
Colombo, Barbara Maria, Cacciapaglia, Fabio, Puntoni, Matteo, Murdaca, Giuseppe, Rossi, Edoardo, Rodriguez, Guido, Nobili, Flavio, Pisciotta, Livia, Bertolini, Stefano, Moccetti, Tiziano, Dentali, Francesco, Steidl, Luigi, Ciprandi, Giorgio, Afeltra, Antonella, Indiveri, Francesco, and Puppo, Francesco
- Subjects
- *
VASCULAR endothelial growth factors , *ATHEROSCLEROSIS risk factors , *SYSTEMIC lupus erythematosus , *BLOOD plasma , *WOMEN patients , *AUTOIMMUNITY - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: To evaluate the role of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in accelerated atherosclerosis in patients with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE). Methods: We have enrolled 80 SLE female patients and 80 age-matched healthy control females who underwent a structured interview, physical examination, routine laboratory tests, VEGF plasma level determination and B-mode ultrasonography of carotid arteries to determine carotid intima media thickness (IMT). Framingham risk factors for cardiovascular events were also calculated and VEGF plasma levels were correlated with traditional and nontraditional cardiovascular risk factors. Results: SLE was significantly associated with higher mean IMT values (0.74±0.15 mm versus 0.59±0.12 mm in controls, p <0.001) and higher mean plasma VEGF levels (307.9±292.2 pg/mL versus 120.7±118.4 pg/mL in controls, p <0.001) independently from age, smoking habits, and Framingham risk factors. A significant correlation was also found between IMT and VEGF values (r =0.25; p <0.001). Conclusion: We show that SLE patients have increased mean IMT and VEGF values as compared with healthy age-matched controls and that IMT and VEGF values are independently and directly associated with SLE disease. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
232. Directionality of EEG synchronization in Alzheimer's disease subjects
- Author
-
Babiloni, Claudio, Ferri, Raffaele, Binetti, Giuliano, Vecchio, Fabrizio, Frisoni, Giovanni B., Lanuzza, Bartolo, Miniussi, Carlo, Nobili, Flavio, Rodriguez, Guido, Rundo, Francesco, Cassarino, Andrea, Infarinato, Francesco, Cassetta, Emanuele, Salinari, Serenella, Eusebi, Fabrizio, and Rossini, Paolo M.
- Subjects
- *
ALZHEIMER'S disease , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *DISEASES in older people , *DIAGNOSIS of brain diseases - Abstract
Abstract: Is directionality of electroencephalographic (EEG) synchronization abnormal in amnesic mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer''s disease (AD)? EEG data were recorded in 64 normal elderly (Nold), 69 amnesic MCI, and 73 mild AD subjects at rest condition (closed eyes). Direction of information flux within EEG functional coupling at electrode pairs was performed by directed transfer function (DTF) at delta (2–4Hz), theta (4–8Hz), alpha 1 (8–10Hz), alpha 2 (10–12Hz), beta 1 (13–20Hz), beta 2 (20–30Hz), and gamma (30–40Hz). Parietal to frontal direction of the information flux within EEG functional coupling was stronger in Nold than in MCI and/or AD subjects, namely for alpha and beta rhythms. In contrast, the directional flow within inter-hemispheric EEG functional coupling did not discriminate among the three groups. These results suggest that directionality of parieto-to-frontal EEG synchronization is abnormal not only in AD but also in amnesic MCI. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
233. Principal component analysis of FDG PET in amnestic MCI.
- Author
-
Nobili, Flavio, Salmaso, Dario, Morbelli, Silvia, Girtler, Nicola, Piccardo, Arnoldo, Brugnolo, Andrea, Dessi, Barbara, Larsson, Stig A., Rodriguez, Guido, and Pagani, Marco
- Subjects
- *
MEMORY disorders , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *CRITICAL thinking , *DISCRIMINANT analysis , *INFORMATION processing , *MEMORY - Abstract
The purpose of the study is to evaluate the combined accuracy of episodic memory performance and 18F-FDG PET in identifying patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) converting to Alzheimer’s disease (AD), aMCI non-converters, and controls. Thirty-three patients with aMCI and 15 controls (CTR) were followed up for a mean of 21 months. Eleven patients developed AD (MCI/AD) and 22 remained with aMCI (MCI/MCI). 18F-FDG PET volumetric regions of interest underwent principal component analysis (PCA) that identified 12 principal components (PC), expressed by coarse component scores (CCS). Discriminant analysis was performed using the significant PCs and episodic memory scores. PCA highlighted relative hypometabolism in PC5, including bilateral posterior cingulate and left temporal pole, and in PC7, including the bilateral orbitofrontal cortex, both in MCI/MCI and MCI/AD vs CTR. PC5 itself plus PC12, including the left lateral frontal cortex (LFC: BAs 44, 45, 46, 47), were significantly different between MCI/AD and MCI/MCI. By a three-group discriminant analysis, CTR were more accurately identified by PET-CCS + delayed recall score (100%), MCI/MCI by PET-CCS + either immediate or delayed recall scores (91%), while MCI/AD was identified by PET-CCS alone (82%). PET increased by 25% the correct allocations achieved by memory scores, while memory scores increased by 15% the correct allocations achieved by PET. Combining memory performance and 18F-FDG PET yielded a higher accuracy than each single tool in identifying CTR and MCI/MCI. The PC containing bilateral posterior cingulate and left temporal pole was the hallmark of MCI/MCI patients, while the PC including the left LFC was the hallmark of conversion to AD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
234. Brain SPECT in subtypes of mild cognitive impairment.
- Author
-
Nobili, Flavio, Frisoni, Giovanni, Portet, Florence, Verhey, Frans, Rodriguez, Guido, Caroli, Anna, Touchon, Jacques, Calvini, Piero, Morbelli, Silvia, Carli, Fabrizio, Guerra, Ugo, Pol, Laura, and Visser, Pieter-Jelle
- Subjects
- *
ALZHEIMER'S disease diagnosis , *PRESENILE dementia , *COGNITION disorders , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *MEDICAL screening , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
The Development of Screening Guidelines and Clinical Criteria of Predementia Alzheimer’s Disease (DESCRIPA) multicenter study enrolled patients with MCI or subjective cognitive complaints (SUBJ), a part of whom underwent optional brain perfusion SPECT. These patients were classified as SUBJ (n = 23), nonamnestic MCI (naMCI; n = 17) and amnestic MCI (aMCI; n = 40) based on neuropsychology. Twenty healthy subjects formed the control (CTR) group. Volumetric regions of interest (VROI) analysis was performed in six associative cortical areas in each hemisphere. ANOVA for repeated measures, corrected for age and center, showed significant differences between groups (p = 0.01) and VROI (p < 0.0001) with a significant group-region interaction (p = 0.029). In the post hoc comparison, SUBJ did not differ from CTR. aMCI disclosed reduced uptake in the left hippocampus and bilateral temporal cortex (compared with CTR) or in the left hippocampus and bilateral parietal cortex (compared with SUBJ). In the naMCI group, reduced VROI values were found in the bilateral temporal cortex and right frontal cortex. In the comparison between aMCI and naMCI, the former had lower values in the left parietal cortex and precuneus. Discriminant analysis between SUBJ/CTR versus all MCI patients allowed correct allocations in 73 % of cases. Mean VROI values were highly correlated (p < 0.0001) with the learning measure of a verbal memory test, especially in the bilateral precunei and parietal cortex and in the left hippocampus. In a subset of 70 patients, mean VROI values showed a significant correlation (p < 0.05) with the white matter hyperintensities score on MRI. In conclusion, MCI subtypes have different perfusion patterns. The aMCI group exhibited a pattern that is typical of early Alzheimer’s disease, while the naMCI group showed a more anterior pattern of hypoperfusion. Instead, a homogeneous group effect was lacking in SUBJ. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
235. Functional MRI in Malformations of Cortical Development: Activation of Dysplastic Tissue and Functional Reorganization.
- Author
-
Vitali, Paolo, Minati, Ludovico, D'Incerti, Ludovico, Maccagnano, Elio, Mavilio, Nicola, Capello, Dario, Dylgjeri, Suela, Rodriguez, Guido, Franceschetti, Silvana, Spreafico, Roberto, and Villani, Flavio
- Subjects
- *
MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *NERVE tissue , *CEREBRAL cortex abnormalities , *HUMAN abnormalities , *ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Functional neuroimaging and electrophysiological studies suggest that dysplastic neural tissue in malformations of cortical development may participate in task performance, and that functional organization can be altered beyond visible lesion boundaries. The aim of this work was to investigate cortical function in a heterogeneous group of patients with malformations of cortical development. METHODS Twelve patients participated in the study, 2 for each of the following categories: subcortical, periventricular, and band heterotopia, unilateral and bilateral polymicrogyria, and focal cortical dysplasia. Functional magnetic resonance imaging was performed with finger tapping, somatosensory and visual stimulation, and language-related tasks. RESULTS We found activations within the dysplastic tissue in subcortical heterotopia, band heterotopia, and polymicrogyria, but not in periventricular heterotopic nodules. In one of the patients with focal cortical dysplasia, language-related activation involved part of the lesion. Functional reorganization beyond visible lesion boundaries was seen, with different patterns, in 4 patients. CONCLUSIONS In accordance with previous reports, our findings indicate that dysplastic neural tissue can be activated during task performance, and that in some patients, extensive functional reorganization occurs, highlighting the importance of functional magnetic resonance imaging in presurgical planning in those patients for whom epilepsy surgery is considered as an option. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
236. Is it possible to automatically distinguish resting EEG data of normal elderly vs. mild cognitive impairment subjects with high degree of accuracy?
- Author
-
Rossini, Paolo M., Buscema, Massimo, Capriotti, Massimiliano, Grossi, Enzo, Rodriguez, Guido, Del Percio, Claudio, and Babiloni, Claudio
- Subjects
- *
COGNITION disorders , *DISEASES in older people , *BIOLOGICAL neural networks , *ARTIFICIAL neural networks , *COGNITIVE neuroscience , *EYE care , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *IMPLICIT functions - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: It has been shown that a new procedure (implicit function as squashing time, IFAST) based on artificial neural networks (ANNs) is able to compress eyes-closed resting electroencephalographic (EEG) data into spatial invariants of the instant voltage distributions for an automatic classification of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer’s disease (AD) subjects with classification accuracy of individual subjects higher than 92%. Methods: Here we tested the hypothesis that this is the case also for the classification of individual normal elderly (Nold) vs. MCI subjects, an important issue for the screening of large populations at high risk of AD. Eyes-closed resting EEG data (10–20 electrode montage) were recorded in 171 Nold and in 115 amnesic MCI subjects. The data inputs for the classification by IFAST were the weights of the connections within a nonlinear auto-associative ANN trained to generate the instant voltage distributions of 60-s artifact-free EEG data. Results: The most relevant features were selected and coincidently the dataset was split into two halves for the final binary classification (training and testing) performed by a supervised ANN. The classification of the individual Nold and MCI subjects reached 95.87% of sensitivity and 91.06% of specificity (93.46% of accuracy). Conclusions: These results indicate that IFAST can reliably distinguish eyes-closed resting EEG in individual Nold and MCI subjects. Significance: IFAST may be used for large-scale periodic screening of large populations at risk of AD and personalized care. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
237. Resting EEG sources correlate with attentional span in mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease.
- Author
-
Babiloni, Claudio, Cassetta, Emanuele, Binetti, Giuliano, Tombini, Mario, Del Percio, Claudio, Ferreri, Florinda, Ferri, Raffaele, Frisoni, Giovanni, Lanuzza, Bartolo, Nobili, Flavio, Parisi, Laura, Rodriguez, Guido, Frigerio, Leonardo, Gurzì, Mariella, Prestia, Annapaola, Vernieri, Fabrizio, Eusebi, Fabrizio, and Rossini, Paolo M.
- Subjects
- *
ALPHA rhythm , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *PRESENILE dementia , *SENILE dementia , *SHORT-term memory , *MEMORY , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *MEDICAL radiography - Abstract
Previous evidence has shown that resting delta and alpha electroencephalographic (EEG) rhythms are abnormal in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and its potential preclinical stage (mild cognitive impairment, MCI). Here, we tested the hypothesis that these EEG rhythms are correlated with memory and attention in the continuum across MCI and AD. Resting eyes-closed EEG data were recorded in 34 MCI and 53 AD subjects. EEG rhythms of interest were delta (2–4 Hz), theta (4–8 Hz), alpha 1 (8–10.5 Hz), alpha 2 (10.5–13 Hz), beta 1 (13–20 Hz), and beta 2 (20–30 Hz). EEG cortical sources were estimated by low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (LORETA). These sources were correlated with neuropsychological measures such as Rey list immediate recall (word short-term memory), Rey list delayed recall (word medium-term memory), Digit span forward (immediate memory for digits probing focused attention), and Corsi span forward (visuo-spatial immediate memory probing focused attention). A statistically significant negative correlation (Bonferroni corrected, P < 0.05) was observed between Corsi span forward score and amplitude of occipital or temporal delta sources across MCI and AD subjects. Furthermore, a positive correlation was shown between Digit span forward score and occipital alpha 1 sources (Bonferroni corrected, P < 0.05). These results suggest that cortical sources of resting delta and alpha rhythms correlate with neuropsychological measures of immediate memory based on focused attention in the continuum of MCI and AD subjects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
238. Donepezil effects on sources of cortical rhythms in mild Alzheimer's disease: Responders vs. Non-Responders
- Author
-
Babiloni, Claudio, Cassetta, Emanuele, Dal Forno, Gloria, Del Percio, Claudio, Ferreri, Florinda, Ferri, Raffaele, Lanuzza, Bartolo, Miniussi, Carlo, Moretti, Davide V., Nobili, Flavio, Pascual-Marqui, Roberto D., Rodriguez, Guido, Luca Romani, Gian, Salinari, Serenella, Zanetti, Orazio, and Rossini, Paolo M.
- Subjects
- *
ALZHEIMER'S disease , *NEURAL circuitry , *TOMOGRAPHY , *ELECTRODIAGNOSIS , *NEURAL transmission - Abstract
Abstract: Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (AChEI) such as donepezil act in mild Alzheimer''s disease (AD) by increasing cholinergic tone. Differences in the clinical response in patients who do or do not benefit from therapy may be due to different functional features of the central neural systems. We tested this hypothesis using cortical electroencephalographic (EEG) rhythmicity. Resting eyes-closed EEG data were recorded in 58 mild AD patients (Mini Mental State Examination [MMSE] range 17–24) before and approximately 1 year after standard donepezil treatment. Based on changes of MMSE scores between baseline and follow-up, 28 patients were classified as “Responders” (MMSEvar ≥0) and 30 patients as “Non-Responders” (MMSEvar <0). EEG rhythms of interest were delta (2–4 Hz), theta (4–8 Hz), alpha 1 (8–10.5 Hz), alpha 2 (10.5–13 Hz), beta 1 (13–20 Hz), and beta 2 (20–30 Hz). Cortical EEG sources were studied with low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (LORETA). Before treatment, posterior sources of delta, alpha 1 and alpha 2 frequencies were greater in amplitude in Non-Responders. After treatment, a lesser magnitude reduction of occipital and temporal alpha 1 sources characterized Responders. These results suggest that Responders and Non-Responders had different EEG cortical rhythms. Donepezil could act by reactivating existing yet functionally silent cortical synapses in Responders, restoring temporal and occipital alpha rhythms. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
239. Frontal white matter volume and delta EEG sources negatively correlate in awake subjects with mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease
- Author
-
Babiloni, Claudio, Frisoni, Giovanni, Steriade, Mircea, Bresciani, Lorena, Binetti, Giuliano, Del Percio, Claudio, Geroldi, Cristina, Miniussi, Carlo, Nobili, Flavio, Rodriguez, Guido, Zappasodi, Filippo, Carfagna, Tania, and M. Rossini, Paolo
- Subjects
- *
ALZHEIMER'S disease , *MAGNETOENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *COGNITION disorders , *DELTA rhythm , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: A relationship between brain atrophy and delta rhythmicity (1.5–4Hz) has been previously explored in Alzheimer''s disease (AD) subjects [Fernandez A, Arrazola J, Maestu F, Amo C, Gil-Gregorio P, Wienbruch C, Ortiz T. Correlations of hippocampal atrophy and focal low-frequency magnetic activity in Alzheimer disease: volumetric MR imaging-magnetoencephalographic study. Am J Neuroradiol. 2003 24(3):481–487]. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that such a relationship does exist not only in AD patients but also across the continuum of subjects with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and AD. Methods: Resting, eyes-closed EEG data were recorded in 34 MCI and 65 AD subjects. EEG rhythms of interest were delta (2–4Hz), theta (4–8Hz), alpha 1 (8–10.5Hz), alpha 2 (10.5–13Hz), beta 1 (13–20Hz), and beta 2 (20–30Hz). EEG cortical sources were estimated by LORETA. Cortical EEG sources were correlated with MR-based measurements of lobar brain volume (white and gray matter). Results: A negative correlation was observed between the frontal white matter and the amplitude of frontal delta sources (2–4Hz) across MCI and AD subjects. Conclusions: These results confirmed for the first time the hypothesis that the sources of resting delta rhythms (2–4Hz) are correlated with lobar brain volume across MCI and AD subjects. Significance: The present findings support, at least at group level, the ‘transition hypothesis’ of brain structural and functional continuity between MCI and AD. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
240. Fusion of the MR Image to SPECT With Possible Correction for Partial Volume Effects.
- Author
-
Calvini, Piero, Massone, Anna Maria, Nobili, Flavio Mariano, and Rodriguez, Guido
- Subjects
- *
IMAGE reconstruction , *POSITRON emission tomography , *SCANNING systems , *MEDICAL radiography , *TOMOGRAPHY , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging , *SCIENTIFIC apparatus & instruments , *MEDICAL equipment , *ENGINEERING instruments - Abstract
Low spatial resolution and the related partial volume effects limit the diagnostic potential of brain single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) imaging. As a possible remedy for this problem we propose a technique for the fusion of SPECT and MR images, which requires for a given patient the SPECT data and the T1-weighted MR image. Basically, after the reconstruction and coregistration steps, the high-frequency part of the MR, which would be unrecoverable by the set SPECT acquisition system + reconstruction algorithm, is extracted and added to the SPECT image. The tuning of the weight of the MR on the resulting fused image can be performed very quickly, any iterative reconstruction algorithm can be used and, in the case that the SPECT projections are not available, the proposed technique can also be applied directly to the SPECT image, provided that the performance of the scanner is known. The procedure has the potential of increasing the diagnostic value of a SPECT image. Even in the locations of SPECT-MR mismatch it does not significantly affect quantitation over regions of interest (ROIs) whose dimensions are decidedly larger than the SPECT resolution distance. On the other hand, appreciable corrections for partial volume effects are expected in the locations where the contrast in the structural MR matches the corresponding contrast in functional activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
241. Genotype (cystatin C) and EEG phenotype in Alzheimer disease and mild cognitive impairment: A multicentric study
- Author
-
Babiloni, Claudio, Benussi, Luisa, Binetti, Giuliano, Bosco, Paolo, Busonero, Gabriella, Cesaretti, Simona, Dal Forno, Gloria, Del Percio, Claudio, Ferri, Raffaele, Frisoni, Giovanni, Ghidoni, Roberta, Rodriguez, Guido, Squitti, Rosanna, and Rossini, Paolo M.
- Subjects
- *
ETIOLOGY of diseases , *COGNITION disorders , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *PHENOTYPES , *GENETIC vectors - Abstract
Abstract: Previous findings demonstrated that haplotype B of CST3, the gene coding for cystatin C, is a recessive risk factor for late-onset Alzheimer''s disease (AD; Finckh, U., von der Kammer, H., Velden, J., Michel, T., Andresen, B., Deng, A., Zhang, J., Muller-Thomsen, T., Zuchowski, K., Menzer, G., Mann, U., Papassotiropoulos, A., Heun, R., Zurdel, J., Holst, F., Benussi, L., Stoppe, G., Reiss, J., Miserez, A.R., Staehelin, H.B., Rebeck, G.W., Hyman, B.T., Binetti, G., Hock, C., Growdon, J.H., Nitsch, R.M., 2000. Genetic association of the cystatin C gene with late-onset Alzheimer disease. Arch. Neurol. 57, 1579–1583). In the present multicentric electroencephalographic (EEG) study, we analyzed the effects of CST3 haplotypes on resting cortical rhythmicity in subjects with AD and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) with the hypothesis that sources of resting EEG rhythms are more impaired in carriers of the CST3 B haplotype than non-carriers. We enrolled a population of 84 MCI subjects (42% with the B haplotype) and 65 AD patients (40% with the B haplotype). Resting eyes-closed EEG data were recorded in all subjects. EEG rhythms of interest were delta (2–4 Hz), theta (4–8 Hz), alpha 1 (8–10.5 Hz), alpha 2 (10.5–13 Hz), beta 1 (13–20 Hz), and beta 2 (20–30 Hz). EEG cortical sources were estimated by low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (LORETA). Results showed that the amplitude of alpha 1 (parietal, occipital, temporal areas) and alpha 2 (occipital area) was statistically lower in CST3 B carriers than non-carriers (P < 0.01). Whereas there was a trend towards statistical significance that amplitude of occipital delta sources was stronger in CST3 B carriers than in non-carriers. This was true for both MCI and AD subjects. The present findings represent the first demonstration of relationships between the AD genetic risk factor CST3 B and global neurophysiological phenotype (i.e., cortical delta and alpha rhythmicity) in MCI and AD subjects, prompting future genotype–EEG phenotype studies for the early prediction of AD conversion in individual MCI subjects. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
242. Sources of cortical rhythms in adults during physiological aging: A multicentric EEG study.
- Author
-
Babiloni, Claudio, Binetti, Giuliano, Cassarino, Andrea, Dal Forno, Gloria, Del Percio, Claudio, Ferreri, Florinda, Ferri, Raffaele, Frisoni, Giovanni, Galderisi, Silvana, Hirata, Koichi, Lanuzza, Bartolo, Miniussi, Carlo, Mucci, Armida, Nobili, Flavio, Rodriguez, Guido, Luca Romani, Gian, and Rossini, Paolo M.
- Abstract
This electroencephalographic (EEG) study tested whether cortical EEG rhythms (especially delta and alpha) show a progressive increasing or decreasing trend across physiological aging. To this aim, we analyzed the type of correlation (linear and nonlinear) between cortical EEG rhythms and age. Resting eyes-closed EEG data were recorded in 108 young (Nyoung; age range: 18-50 years, mean age 27.3 ± 7.3 SD) and 107 elderly (Nold; age range: 51-85 years, mean age 67.3 ± 9.2 SD) subjects. The EEG rhythms of interest were delta (2-4 Hz), theta (4-8 Hz), alpha 1 (8-10.5 Hz), alpha 2 (10.5-13 Hz), beta 1 (13-20 Hz), and beta 2 (20-30 Hz). EEG cortical sources were estimated by low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (LORETA). Statistical results showed that delta sources in the occipital area had significantly less magnitude in Nold compared to Nyoung subjects. Similarly, alpha 1 and alpha 2 sources in the parietal, occipital, temporal, and limbic areas had significantly less magnitude in Nold compared to Nyoung subjects. These nine EEG sources were given as input for evaluating the type (linear, exponential, logarithmic, and power) of correlation with age. When subjects were considered as a single group there was a significant linear correlation of age with the magnitude of delta sources in the occipital area and of alpha 1 sources in occipital and limbic areas. The same was true for alpha 2 sources in the parietal, occipital, temporal, and limbic areas. In general, the EEG sources showing significant linear correlation with age also supported a nonlinear correlation with age. These results suggest that the occipital delta and posterior cortical alpha rhythms decrease in magnitude during physiological aging with both linear and nonlinear trends. In conclusion, this new methodological approach holds promise for the prediction of dementia in mild cognitive impairment by regional source rather than surface EEG data and by both linear and nonlinear predictors. Hum Brain Mapp, 2005. © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
243. Sources of cortical rhythms change as a function of cognitive impairment in pathological aging: a multicenter study
- Author
-
Babiloni, Claudio, Binetti, Giuliano, Cassetta, Emanuele, Forno, Gloria Dal, Percio, Claudio Del, Ferreri, Florinda, Ferri, Raffaele, Frisoni, Giovanni, Hirata, Koichi, Lanuzza, Bartolo, Miniussi, Carlo, Moretti, Davide V., Nobili, Flavio, Rodriguez, Guido, Romani, Gian Luca, Salinari, Serenella, and Rossini, Paolo M.
- Subjects
- *
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *DIAGNOSIS of brain diseases , *HUNTINGTON disease , *DEMENTIA , *ALZHEIMER'S disease - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: The present study tested the hypothesis that cortical electroencephalographic (EEG) rhythms. change across normal elderly (Nold), mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and Alzheimer''s disease (AD) subjects as a function of the global cognitive level. Methods: Resting eyes-closed EEG data were recorded in 155 MCI, 193 mild AD, and 126 age-matched Nold subjects. EEG rhythms of interest were delta (2–4Hz), theta (4–8Hz), alpha 1 (8–10.5Hz), alpha 2 (10.5–13Hz), beta 1 (13–20Hz), and beta 2 (20–30Hz). EEG cortical sources were estimated by LORETA. Results: Occipital delta and alpha 1 sources in parietal, occipital, temporal, and ‘limbic’ areas had an intermediate magnitude in MCI subjects compared to mild AD and Nold subjects. These five EEG sources presented both linear and nonlinear (linear, exponential, logarithmic, and power) correlations with the global cognitive level (as revealed by mini mental state examination score) across all subjects. Conclusions: Cortical EEG rhythms change in pathological aging as a function of the global cognitive level. Significance: The present functional data on large populations support the ‘transitional hypothesis’ of a shadow zone across normality, pre-clinical stage of dementia (MCI), and AD. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
244. Stroop interference task and single-photon emission tomography in anorexia: A preliminary report.
- Author
-
Ferro, Antonio Maria, Brugnolo, Andrea, De Leo, Caterina, Dessi, Barbara, Girtler, Nicola, Morbelli, Silvia, Nobili, Flavio, Rossi, Davide Sebastiano, Falchero, Maria, Murialdo, Giovanni, Rossini, Paolo M., Babiloni, Claudio, Schizzi, Rodolfo, Padolecchia, Riccardo, and Rodriguez, Guido
- Subjects
- *
APPETITE loss , *POSITRON emission tomography , *APPETITE disorders , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging , *BODY weight , *MEDICAL radiography - Abstract
Objective The aim of this preliminary study was to investigate the physiologic substrate of executive function in anorexia nervosa (AN) by assessing the relation between brain perfusion and Stroop interference task (SIT). Method The classical SIT test and brain single-photon emission tomography (SPET) were evaluated in 16 AN females (mean age = 23.69 ± 8.68 years; mean body mass index [BMI] = 16.19 ± 1.53 kg/m2). The relation between the two examinations was searched by statistical parametric mapping (SPM 99) with a height threshold of p = .001. Results An abnormally low or a borderline SIT value was found in 25% of patients. A significant correlation between the SIT score and brain perfusion was found in the superior frontal gyrus of both hemispheres (Brodmann's area [BA] 6 in both hemispheres and BA 8 in the right hemisphere). No correlation was found in the anterior cingulate gyrus. Conclusion BA 6 and BA 8 and the anterior cingulate are believed to be the basis of both error detection and immediate correction. Activity of BA 6 and BA 8 reflects this executive task in AN patients as well, whereas the lack of correlation in the anterior cingulate may suggest its blunted activity in AN patients, similarly to what is shown in other conditions characterized by impaired executive function, such as patients with depression, patients with schizophrenia, and abstinent drug abusers. However, these findings should still be quoted as preliminary, given some limitations of the study design, such as the lack of a control group, and the unfeasibility of controlling some relevant confounding variables, such as psychiatric comorbidity, medication, and the time interval between examinations, mainly deriving from the relatively few patients studied. © 2005 by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
245. Grouping for behavioral and psychological symptoms in dementia: clinical and biological aspects. Consensus paper of the European Alzheimer disease consortium
- Author
-
Robert, Philippe H., Verhey, Frans R.J., Byrne, E. Jane, Hurt, Catherine, De Deyn, Peter Paul, Nobili, Flavio, Riello, Roberta, Rodriguez, Guido, Frisoni, Giovanni B., Tsolaki, Magda, Kyriazopoulou, Nora, Bullock, Roger, Burns, Alistair, and Vellas, Bruno
- Subjects
- *
HUNTINGTON disease , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *BIOCHEMISTRY , *PSYCHOMETRICS - Abstract
Abstract: Behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD), constitute a major clinical component of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). There is a growing interest in BPSD as they are responsible for a large share of the suffering of patients and caregivers, and they strongly determine the patient’s lifestyle and management. Better detection and understanding of these symptoms is essential to provide appropriate management. This article is a consensus produced by the behavioral group of the European Alzheimer’s Disease Consortium (EADC). The aim of this article is to present clinical description and biological correlates of the major behavioral and psychological symptomatology in AD. BPSD is not a unitary concept. Instead, it should be divided into several symptoms or more likely: groups of symptoms, each possibly reflecting a different prevalence, course over time, biological correlate and psychosocial determinants. There is some clinical evidence for clusters within groups of BPSD. Biological studies indicate that patients with AD and BPSD are associated with variations in the pathological features (atrophy, brain perfusion/metabolism, histopathology) when compared to people with AD without BPSD. An individually tailored approach taking all these aspects into account is warranted as it may offer more, and better, pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment opportunities. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
246. Resting SPECT-neuropsychology correlation in very mild Alzheimer's disease
- Author
-
Nobili, Flavio, Brugnolo, Andrea, Calvini, Piero, Copello, Francesco, De Leo, Caterina, Girtler, Nicola, Morbelli, Silvia, Piccardo, Arnoldo, Vitali, Paolo, and Rodriguez, Guido
- Subjects
- *
ALZHEIMER'S disease , *PERFUSION , *COGNITION disorders , *BRAIN damage , *BRAIN diseases - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: To investigate the relationships between brain function and some of the most frequently impaired cognitive domains in the first stages of Alzheimer''s disease (AD), we searched for correlation between the scores on 3 neuropsychological tests and brain perfusion, assessed by single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in patients with very mild AD. Methods: Twenty-nine consecutive outpatients (mean age 78.2±5.5) affected by probable AD in the very mild phase (i.e. with a score ≥20 on the mini-mental state examination, MMSE) underwent brain SPECT with 99mTc-ethylcisteinate dimer. For correlative purposes, word list learning (by the selective reminding test, SRT), constructional praxis test (CPT) and visual search test (VST) were chosen a priori out of an extended battery employed to diagnose AD at first patient evaluation. Voxel-based correlation analysis was achieved by statistical parametric mapping (SPM99) with a height threshold of P=0.005. Age, years of education and the MMSE score were inserted in the correlative analysis as confounding variables. Results: The SRT score showed correlation with brain perfusion in 3 clusters of the left hemisphere, including the post-central gyrus, the parietal precuneus, the inferior parietal lobule and the middle temporal gyrus, and in one cluster in the right hemisphere including the middle temporal gyrus and the middle occipital gyrus. The CPT score was significantly correlated with brain perfusion in the parietal precuneus and the posterior cingulate gyrus in the left hemisphere, whereas the VST score gave a significant correlation with brain perfusion in a left cluster including the parietal precuneus and the superior temporal gyrus. Conclusions: Cognitive impairment in very mild AD is reflected by brain dysfunction in posterior associative areas, with peculiar topographical differences proper of each domain. The parietal precuneus was a common site of correlation of all 3 neuropsychological tests. This region, together with the posterior cingulate and the superficial posterior temporal–parietal cortex, is thought to be affected by disconnection from the mesial temporal lobe, besides being directly affected by increased oxidative stress and by atrophy as well. The impairment of these areas is thought to contribute to cognitive decline in verbal memory, constructional praxis and visual sustained attention which are indeed among the earliest signs of cognitive impairment in AD. Significance: Assessing the relationships between neuropsychology and brain functional imaging is a key approach to clarify the pathophysiology of cognitive failure in AD; the specificity of these findings in AD remains to be proven through comparison with correlation achieved in matched controls. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
247. Abnormal fronto-parietal coupling of brain rhythms in mild Alzheimer's disease: a multicentric EEG study.
- Author
-
Babiloni, Claudio, Ferri, Raffaele, Moretti, Davide V., Strambi, Andrea, Binetti, Giuliano, Dal Forno, Gloria, Ferreri, Florinda, Lanuzza, Bartolo, Bonato, Claudio, Nobili, Flavio, Rodriguez, Guido, Salinari, Serenella, Passero, Stefano, Rocchi, Raffaele, Stam, C. J., and Rossini, Paolo M.
- Subjects
- *
BRAIN , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *DEMENTIA , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *BRAIN diseases , *LABORATORY rats - Abstract
Cholinergic deafferentation/recovery in rats mainly impinges on the fronto-parietal coupling of brain rhythms [D. P Holschneider etal. (1999) Exp. Brain Res., 126, 270-280]. Is this reflected by the functional coupling of fronto-parietal cortical rhythms at an early stage of Alzheimer's disease (mild AD)? Resting electroencephalographic (EEG) rhythms were studied in 82 patients with mild AD and in control subjects, such as 41 normal elderly (Nold) subjects and 25 patients with vascular dementia (VaD). Patients with AD and VaD had similar mini-mental state evaluation scores of 17-24. The functional coupling was estimated by means of the synchronization likelihood (SL) of the EEG data at electrode pairs, accounting for linear and non-linear components of that coupling. Cortical rhythms of interest were delta (2-4 Hz), theta (4-8 Hz), alpha (1 8-10.5 Hz), alpha 2(10.5-13 Hz), beta 1 (13-20 Hz), beta 2 (20-30 Hz) and gamma (30-40 Hz). A preliminary data analysis (Nold) showed that surface Laplacian transformation of the EEG data reduced the values of SL, possibly because of the reduction of influences due to head volume conduction. Therefore, the final analysis was performed on Laplacian- transformed EEG data. The SL was dominant at alpha 1 band in all groups. Compared with the Nold subjects, patients with VaD and mild AD presented a marked reduction of SL at both fronto-parietal (delta-alpha) and inter-hemispherical (delta-beta) electrode pairs. The feature distinguishing the patients with mild AD with respect to patients with VaD groups was a more prominent reduction of fronto- parietal alpha 1 SL. These results suggest that mild AD is characterized byan abnormal fronto-parietal coupling of the dominant human cortical rhythm at 8-10.5 Hz. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
248. Mapping distributed sources of cortical rhythms in mild Alzheimer's disease. A multicentric EEG study
- Author
-
Babiloni, Claudio, Binetti, Giuliano, Cassetta, Emanuele, Cerboneschi, Daniele, Dal Forno, Gloria, Del Percio, Claudio, Ferreri, Florinda, Ferri, Raffaele, Lanuzza, Bartolo, Miniussi, Carlo, Moretti, Davide V., Nobili, Flavio, Pascual-Marqui, Roberto D., Rodriguez, Guido, Romani, Gian Luca, Salinari, Serenella, Tecchio, Franca, Vitali, Paolo, Zanetti, Orazio, and Zappasodi, Filippo
- Subjects
- *
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY , *PRESENILE dementia - Abstract
The study aimed at mapping (i) the distributed electroencephalographic (EEG) sources specific for mild Alzheimer''s disease (AD) compared to vascular dementia (VaD) or normal elderly people (Nold) and (ii) the distributed EEG sources sensitive to the mild AD at different stages of severity. Resting EEG (10–20 electrode montage) was recorded from 48 mild AD, 20 VaD, and 38 Nold subjects. Both AD and VaD patients had 24–17 of mini mental state examination (MMSE). EEG rhythms were delta (2–4 Hz), theta (4–8 Hz), alpha 1 (8–10.5 Hz), alpha 2 (10.5–13 Hz), beta 1 (13–20 Hz), and beta 2 (20–30 Hz). Cortical EEG sources were modeled by low resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (LORETA). Regarding issue i, there was a decline of central, parietal, temporal, and limbic alpha 1 (low alpha) sources specific for mild AD group with respect to Nold and VaD groups. Furthermore, occipital alpha 1 sources showed a strong decline in mild AD compared to VaD group. Finally, distributed theta sources were largely abnormal in VaD but not in mild AD group. Regarding issue ii, there was a lower power of occipital alpha 1 sources in mild AD subgroup having more severe disease. Compared to previous field studies, this was the first investigation that illustrated the power spectrum profiles at the level of cortical (macroregions) EEG sources in mild AD patients having different severity of the disease with respect to VaD and normal subjects. Future studies should evaluate the clinical usefulness of this approach in early differential diagnosis, disease staging, and therapy monitoring. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
249. Quality of life and brain function following high-dose recombinant human erythropoietin in low-risk myelodysplastic syndromes: a preliminary report.
- Author
-
Clavio, Marino, Nobili, Flavio, Balleari, Enrico, Girtler, Nicola, Ballerini, Filippo, Vitali, Paolo, Rosati, Paola, Venturino, Claudia, Varaldo, Riccardo, Gobbi, Marco, Ghio, Riccardo, and Rodriguez, Guido
- Subjects
- *
RECOMBINANT erythropoietin , *MYELODYSPLASTIC syndromes , *QUALITY of life , *NEUROPHYSIOLOGY , *DOSE-response relationship in biochemistry , *IMMUNOPATHOLOGY , *PATIENTS - Abstract
Clavio M, Nobili F, Balleari E, Girtler N, Ballerini F, Vitali P, Rosati P, Venturino C, Varaldo R, Gobbi M, Ghio R, Rodriguez G. Quality of life and brain function following high-dose recombinant human erythropoietin in low-risk myelodysplastic syndromes: a preliminary report. Eur J Haematol 2004: 72: 113–120. © Blackwell Munksgaard 2004. In this prospective study we evaluate the effects of high-dose recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEPO) on quality of life (QOL) and brain function in patients with low-risk myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) (<10% marrow blasts). Preliminary data are reported. Eleven consecutive patients were given rHuEPO (40 000 IU two times a week) for 12 wk. Responsive patients continued with 40 000 IU/wk for further 12 wk. Changes in QOL were assessed by the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Anemia (FACT-An) self-report. Neurophysiological evaluation at the start of the therapy (t0) included duplex scanning of neck vessels, transcranial Doppler sonography (TCD), a complex neuropsychological evaluation, and quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG). Eight patients completed the neurophysiological evaluation after 24 wk (t1). Six patients (55%) achieved an erythroid response after 12 wk, which was maintained after 24 wk of treatment. FACT-An score showed a relevant improvement between t0 and t1 in these patients. At baseline, TCD showed a mean cerebral blood flow (CBF) velocity in the upper normal range. Abnormalities in brain function were observed in five patients. In the eight patients who were re-evaluated at t1, improvement was observed in three responding patients, two of them with abnormal values at t0. A strict correlation between QOL and neurophysiological improvements was not observed. A high-dose induction phase with rHuEPO followed by maintenance therapy may be an effective therapeutic schedule for low-risk MDS patients. The erythroid response was associated with positive changes in the QOL. Neurophysiological improvements occurred only in a part (50%) of responding patients, mainly those who showed altered results at baseline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
250. Individual analysis of EEG frequency and band power in mild Alzheimer's disease
- Author
-
Moretti, Davide V., Babiloni, Claudio, Binetti, Giuliano, Cassetta, Emanuele, Dal Forno, Gloria, Ferreric, Florinda, Ferri, Raffaele, Lanuzza, Bartolo, Miniussi, Carlo, Nobili, Flavio, Rodriguez, Guido, Salinari, Serenella, and Rossini, Paolo M.
- Subjects
- *
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *CHOLINERGIC mechanisms , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *DEMENTIA - Abstract
Objective: This EEG study investigates the role of the cholinergic system, cortico-cortical connections, and sub-cortical white matter on the relationship between individual EEG frequencies and their relative power bands.Methods: EEGs were recorded at rest in 30 normal elderly subjects (Nold), 60 mild Alzheimer disease (AD) and 20 vascular dementia (VaD) patients, comparable for Mini Mental State Evaluation scores (MMSE 17–24). Individual EEG frequencies were indexed by the theta/alpha transition frequency (TF) and by the individual alpha frequency (IAF) with power peak in the extended alpha range (5–14 Hz). Relative power was separately computed for delta, theta, alpha1, alpha2, and alpha3 bands, on the basis of the TF and IAF.Results: Using normal subjects as a reference, VaD patients showed ‘slowing’ of alpha frequency (TF-IAF) and lower alpha2 power; Mild AD patients showed lower alpha2 and alpha3 power; delta power was higher in both AD and VaD patients; Theta power was higher only in VaD patients.Conclusions: Individual analysis of the alpha frequency and power can discriminate mild AD from VaD and normal elderly subjects.Significance: This analysis may probe pathophysiological mechanisms causing AD and VaD. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.