18 results on '"Frisone MF"'
Search Results
2. Neurodevelopmental evolution of West syndrome: a 2-year prospective study.
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Guzzetta F, Cioni G, Mercuri E, Fazzi E, Biagioni E, Veggiotti P, Bancale A, Baranello G, Epifanio R, Frisone MF, Guzzetta A, La Torre G, Mannocci A, Randò T, Ricci D, Signorini S, and Tinelli F
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Developmental Disabilities etiology, Disability Evaluation, Disease Progression, Electroencephalography, Epilepsy diagnosis, Epilepsy etiology, Epilepsy physiopathology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Neurologic Examination, Predictive Value of Tests, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Sleep Wake Disorders diagnosis, Sleep Wake Disorders etiology, Sleep Wake Disorders physiopathology, Spasms, Infantile complications, Vision Disorders diagnosis, Vision Disorders etiology, Vision Disorders physiopathology, Brain growth & development, Brain physiopathology, Developmental Disabilities diagnosis, Developmental Disabilities physiopathology, Spasms, Infantile diagnosis, Spasms, Infantile physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the epileptic and developmental evolution in infants with West syndrome., Methods: A prospective study of 21 infants was performed, with a follow-up at 2 years. Serial assessment included long-term EEG monitoring, visual and auditory evaluation and assessment of neurodevelopment., Results: Neurosensory and developmental impairments at the spasm onset were transitory in seven cases, including four cryptogenic forms. In all other cases, there was a progressive worsening in neurosensory and developmental impairments. The epileptic evolution was generally better: in 11 of the 16 infants without seizures at outcome, spasms had already disappeared by 2 months after disease onset. Statistic analysis of results showed a correlation between neurosensory impairment and development throughout the whole follow-up. In addition, visual function at T1 resulted significant predictor of developmental outcome. Among the epileptic features, disorganization of slow sleep was an unfavorable prognostic factor., Conclusion: Some forms of West syndrome are confirmed to have a benign evolution: among them there are not only cryptogenic cases but also symptomatic ones without significant neurodevelopmental impairment. Abnormalities of sleep organization, expression of the pervasive epileptic disorder, seem to play a role in determining a developmental deterioration. Neurosensory impairment since the onset of the disease could be a relevant cause of the developmental disorder.
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- 2008
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3. Maturation of cerebral electrical activity and development of cortical folding in young very preterm infants.
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Biagioni E, Frisone MF, Laroche S, Kapetanakis BA, Ricci D, Adeyi-Obe M, Lewis H, Kennea N, Cioni G, Cowan F, Rutherford M, Azzopardi D, and Mercuri E
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- Child Development, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Infant, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Cerebral Cortex growth & development, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Electroencephalography, Premature Birth pathology, Premature Birth physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to examine the relationship between cortical development and cerebral electrical activity at early gestational ages., Methods: We obtained EEGs (7.2+/-3.8 days) and MR brain images (3.2+/-2.9 days) after birth in 17<30 week gestation infants without evidence of focal brain injury The EEGs were assessed for discontinuity and characteristic maturational features (delta brush, occipital and temporal sawtooth); cortical development was quantified from MR scans using a specially designed computer programme to measure cortical folding., Results: The inter-burst interval shortened and cortical folding increased with increasing post-menstrual age (PMA). In contrast, the minimum duration of bursts was independent of PMA and cortical folding. Delta brush (8-20 Hz activities) was seen at all PMAs; temporal and occipital sawtooth activities were always more prominent than delta brush but were seen less frequently with increasing PMA and complexity of cortical folding., Conclusion: There was a positive correlation between some but not all maturational features of the preterm neonatal EEG and the complexity of whole brain cortical folding and PMA. These relationships were strong for the inter-burst interval, a global measure of maturation, but not strongly seen for regional features such as occipital and temporal sawtooth within this gestational age range., Significance: Combining neurophysiological examination with detailed neuroimaging gives insights into developmental changes occurring in the very preterm brains and suggests further comparative studies focusing on measures of focal brain development at different gestational ages.
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- 2007
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4. Auditory attention at the onset of West syndrome: correlation with EEG patterns and visual function.
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Baranello G, Randò T, Bancale A, D'Acunto MG, Epifanio R, Frisone MF, Guzzetta A, La Torre G, Mannocci A, Ricci D, Signorini S, Tinelli F, Biagioni E, Veggiotti P, Fazzi E, Mercuri E, Cioni G, and Guzzetta F
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation methods, Female, Humans, Infant, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Retrospective Studies, Attention physiology, Electroencephalography, Hearing physiology, Spasms, Infantile physiopathology, Vision, Ocular physiology
- Abstract
At the onset of West syndrome a specific impairment of visual function has been clearly demonstrated, while other aspects of sensorial development, and in particular of the auditory function, have been less studied. The aim of this study was to evaluate auditory function and orienting responses at the onset of West syndrome, and to relate the results with EEG patterns, visual function and neurodevelopmental competence. A prospective multicentric study was performed on 25 successively enrolled infants with West syndrome; all the patients underwent a full clinical assessment, including MRI and video-EEG, visual function and auditory orienting responses (AORs) as well as Griffiths' developmental scales. The whole assessment performed at the onset of spasms (T0) was repeated after two months (T1). AORs resulted significantly impaired both at T0 and T1. At the onset of spasms a highly significant relationship of auditory attention with visual function and neurodevelopmental competence was shown in both cryptogenic and symptomatic forms, but it was no longer present after two months. Our results may suggest a possible pervasive effect of the epileptic disorder on sensory processing, associated to a deficit of neurodevelopment. Although we failed to show a significant correlation between auditory orienting responses and EEG patterns, some evidence seems to support at least partially an influence of the epileptic disorder per se on the genesis of the sensorial impairment. A longer follow up and a larger cohort will be useful for a better clarification of these findings.
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- 2006
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5. Prognostic value of EEG performed at term age in preterm infants.
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Randò T, Ricci D, Luciano R, Frisone MF, Baranello G, Tonelli T, Pane M, Romagnoli C, Tortorolo G, Mercuri E, and Guzzetta F
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- Brain Damage, Chronic complications, Brain Damage, Chronic physiopathology, Cerebral Palsy etiology, Cerebral Palsy physiopathology, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Cortical Synchronization, Follow-Up Studies, Gestational Age, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Premature growth & development, Predictive Value of Tests, Prognosis, Ultrasonography, Brain Damage, Chronic diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Palsy diagnosis, Child Development physiology, Electroencephalography, Infant, Premature physiology
- Abstract
Rationale: Electroencephalography (EEG) was performed at term age on 32 infants born prematurely (25-32 weeks). EEG was assessed looking for overall background activity and transients., Methods: A quantitative analysis was performed, selecting 5-min epochs of "tracé alternant" free of artefacts during quiet sleep. EEG findings were compared with cranial ultrasound (US) findings at term age and with neurodevelopmental outcome at 2 years (Student's t-test)., Results: The overall EEG background activity was not always related to the outcome or to the severity of cranial US. Infants with normal US and normal outcome had longer synchrony percentage of bursts, longer maximum duration of bursts and shorter mean of abnormal transients per interbursts than children with major lesions and abnormal outcome. Infants with minor lesions, who all had normal outcome, also had better results than those with major lesions and abnormal outcome, but the range of the EEG findings was more variable., Conclusion: Our results suggest that the EEG performed at term age does not provide additional prognostic information compared to cranial US.
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- 2006
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6. Visual function in infants with West syndrome: correlation with EEG patterns.
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Randò T, Bancale A, Baranello G, Bini M, De Belvis AG, Epifanio R, Frisone MF, Guzzetta A, La Torre G, Ricci D, Signorini S, Tinelli F, Biagioni E, Veggiotti P, Mercuri E, Fazzi E, Cioni G, and Guzzetta F
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- Brain Diseases physiopathology, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Humans, Infant, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Sleep physiology, Spasms, Infantile physiopathology, Video Recording, Vision Disorders physiopathology, Vision Tests, Brain physiopathology, Brain Diseases diagnosis, Electroencephalography statistics & numerical data, Spasms, Infantile diagnosis, Vision Disorders diagnosis
- Abstract
Purpose: Several studies have reported behavioral and electrophysiological evidence of visual impairment during the active stage of West syndrome. The underlying mechanisms are, however, poorly understood, and little has been reported about the correlation between visual impairment, EEG patterns, and brain lesions. The aim of the study was to assess visual function at the onset of spasm and 2 months thereafter and relate visual findings to brain lesions and EEG features., Methods: Twenty-five infants with West syndrome were enrolled and studied with (a) a full clinical assessment including a battery of tests specifically designed to assess visual function, (b) a video-polygraphic study, and (c) brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Besides brain neuroimaging and EEG comparison with visual function, an intra-EEG analysis was performed to investigate the possible relation of EEG patterns to fluctuating visual behavior (fixation and following)., Results: Twenty-two children had at least one abnormal result on one or more of the tests assessing visual function at T0. Visual impairment at the spasm onset was related to the sleep disorganization rather than to the hypsarrhythmic pattern in awake EEG. After 2 months, both EEG features become significantly linked to visual function. Visual function improved in several cases after 2 months, in parallel with the seizure regression. No relation was found between EEG patterns and fluctuating visual behavior., Conclusions: The study supplies new evidence of the involvement of visual function in West syndrome. The presence of abnormal visual findings in infants without lesions on brain MRI suggests that visual abnormalities are due not only to brain injury but also to epileptic disorder per se. New insight is also provided into the possible mechanisms underlying clinical and EEG abnormalities., (Copyright 2004 International League Against Epilepsy)
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- 2004
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7. Neurologic examination of preterm infants at term age: comparison with term infants.
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Mercuri E, Guzzetta A, Laroche S, Ricci D, vanhaastert I, Simpson A, Luciano R, Bleakley C, Frisone MF, Haataja L, Tortorolo G, Guzzetta F, de Vries L, Cowan F, and Dubowitz L
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- Female, Gestational Age, Humans, Male, Infant, Newborn physiology, Infant, Premature physiology, Neurologic Examination
- Abstract
Objectives: The aim was to establish the range of neurologic findings in preterm infants reaching term age, their relation to gestational age at birth, and the possible differences with healthy term newborns tested during the first days of life., Study Design: The Dubowitz neonatal neurologic examination was performed at term age in 157 low-risk preterm infants born between 25 and 34 weeks' gestation who had cranial ultrasonograms that were normal or showed minor abnormalities. Infants were subdivided in 3 groups according to their gestational age at birth., Results: Within the preterm cohort, the range of scores for the 3 gestational age subgroups was different from each other for 21 of the 34 items, although the median scores were different only in 10 of the 34 items. The range of scores and their median in preterm infants however was wider than that found in term infants. Preterm infants examined at term were also more hyperexcitable and tended to have less flexor tone in the limbs and less extensor tone in the neck in the sitting posture., Conclusions: The distribution of scores provides useful guidelines when a preterm infant is examined at term.
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- 2003
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8. Neurological and perceptual-motor outcome at 5 - 6 years of age in children with neonatal encephalopathy: relationship with neonatal brain MRI.
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Barnett A, Mercuri E, Rutherford M, Haataja L, Frisone MF, Henderson S, Cowan F, and Dubowitz L
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- Age Factors, Apgar Score, Brain Diseases pathology, Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Motor Neuron Disease pathology, Nervous System Diseases pathology, Prospective Studies, Brain Diseases complications, Brain Diseases congenital, Motor Neuron Disease etiology, Motor Neuron Disease physiopathology, Nervous System Diseases etiology, Nervous System Diseases physiopathology, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Perception physiology
- Abstract
Objective: The aims of this study were 1) to determine the incidence of minor neurological dysfunction and perceptual-motor difficulties in children aged 5-1/2 -- 6-1/2, who had been born full-term but presented with neonatal encephalopathy (NE) and low Apgar scores and 2) to examine the relationships between the presence/absence of these difficulties with neonatal brain MRI., Participants and Methods: Sixty-eight full-term infants with one minute Apgar scores less than or equal to 5 and neurological abnormalities during the first 48 hours after birth were included in the study. All children had a neonatal MRI brain scan. Surviving infants were assessed between the age of 5 and 6 years using the Touwen Examination, the Movement ABC and the WPPSI-R., Results: Fifteen of the 68 infants (22 %) died in the neonatal period. Of the 53 surviving infants, 19 (36 %) had cerebral palsy. The remaining 34 were considered normal at 2 years of age but, when assessed at school age, 8 (15 %) had minor neurological dysfunction and/or perceptual-motor difficulties, 1 (2 %) had only cognitive impairment and 25 (47 %) were normal. The outcome largely reflected the pattern of lesions on brain imaging. While 83 % of those with a normal outcome had normal scans or minimal white matter lesions, 80 % of those with minor neurological dysfunction and/or perceptual-motor difficulties had mild or moderate basal ganglia or more marked white matter lesions., Conclusion: Continued surveillance is recommended for children with apparently normal outcome at two years of age after NE, particularly when abnormalities are detected on brain MRI.
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- 2002
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9. Development of visual attention in West syndrome.
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Guzzetta F, Frisone MF, Ricci D, Randò T, and Guzzetta A
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- Age of Onset, Brain growth & development, Brain physiology, Brain physiopathology, Brain Injuries diagnosis, Brain Injuries physiopathology, Cognition physiology, Cognition Disorders diagnosis, Cognition Disorders physiopathology, Cohort Studies, Developmental Disabilities diagnosis, Developmental Disabilities physiopathology, Eye Movements physiology, Fixation, Ocular physiology, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Spasms, Infantile physiopathology, Vision Disorders diagnosis, Vision Disorders physiopathology, Vision Tests, Visual Acuity, Visual Field Tests, Attention physiology, Child Development physiology, Spasms, Infantile diagnosis, Vision, Ocular physiology
- Abstract
Purpose: To study prospectively the evolution of visual attention in children with West syndrome to evaluate its development before the onset of spasms, its possible deterioration as a consequence of epileptic disorders, and its outcome at the age of 2 years, and the possible relation between the impairment of visual attention and cognitive development., Methods: Infants with symptomatic West syndrome were examined before the onset of spasms and until age 24 +/- 2 months. Visual attention study (through a clinical observation and the fixation-shift test), cognitive assessment, and complete clinical examination including brain magnetic resonance imaging were performed., Results: A maturation defect of fixation shift skills was generally observed in infants with West syndrome. In some cases, the impaired visual-attention abilities paralleled a cognitive deterioration, even months before the onset of spasms. During the acute stage of West syndrome, infants lost the previously acquired visual and cognitive abilities, with a typical fluctuation of arousal. Usually at 2 years, there was a persistent defective visual attention detected with the fixation-shift test., Conclusions: The parallel defect of visual attention and of cognitive competencies is a constant finding in infants with West syndrome; these can precede the clinical onset of epileptic spasms. The severity and persistence of visual inattention might be explained by the age of visual maturation, corresponding to the usual onset of West syndrome.
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- 2002
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10. Prognostic value of the neurologic optimality score at 9 and 18 months in preterm infants born before 31 weeks' gestation.
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Frisone MF, Mercuri E, Laroche S, Foglia C, Maalouf EF, Haataja L, Cowan F, and Dubowitz L
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- Gestational Age, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Sensitivity and Specificity, Infant, Premature physiology, Neurologic Examination
- Abstract
Objective: The Hammersmith Infant Neurological Examination was performed in a cohort of 74 preterm infants whose gestational age ranged between 24 and 30.5 weeks. The infants were examined between 9 and 18 months' chronologic age (6-15 months' corrected age) and scored with the optimality score system previously standardized in a cohort of low-risk term infants. The aim of the study was to establish the frequency distribution of the optimality scores in this cohort and to establish whether the scores can predict locomotor function at 2 years of age., Results: The results showed that this standardized neurologic examination can be performed in preterm infants as early as 9 months' chronologic age to predict motor outcome at 2 years old. The scores showed no significant association with the degree of prematurity or the age of assessment., Conclusion: This examination should be particularly useful in very premature infants who are at high risk of severe neurologic and developmental disabilities and for whom the early prediction of motor function can be difficult.
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- 2002
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11. Combined use of electroencephalogram and magnetic resonance imaging in full-term neonates with acute encephalopathy.
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Biagioni E, Mercuri E, Rutherford M, Cowan F, Azzopardi D, Frisone MF, Cioni G, and Dubowitz L
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- Brain pathology, Developmental Disabilities etiology, Humans, Hypoxia-Ischemia, Brain complications, Infant, Newborn, Neurologic Examination, Predictive Value of Tests, Prognosis, Electroencephalography, Hypoxia-Ischemia, Brain diagnosis, Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- Abstract
Objective: The electroencephalogram (EEG) is widely used in full-term infants with acute neonatal encephalopathy, and its prognostic value has been confirmed by several studies. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain has also been applied in these patients, and increasing numbers of reports affirm its prognostic reliability. The aim of this study has been to investigate the correlation between an early EEG and MRI findings in infants with acute neonatal encephalopathy and to assess the prognostic value of a combination of EEG and MRI findings., Participants and Methods: Twenty-five full-term infants had an EEG recorded within the first 72 hours after birth and a neonatal brain MRI scan after the end of the first week., Results: Both EEG and MRI were predictive of outcome. A normal MRI was always associated with normal EEG background activity and normal outcome and severe abnormalities on MRI with marked EEG abnormalities and an abnormal outcome. When the MRI showed moderate abnormalities, the EEG in all cases but one identified patients with normal and abnormal outcome.EEG, MRI, HIE, neurodevelopment.
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- 2001
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12. Occipital sawtooth: a physiological EEG pattern in very premature infants.
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Biagioni E, Frisone MF, Laroche S, Rutherford M, Counsell S, Cioni G, Azzopardi D, Mercuri E, and Cowan F
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- Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Electroencephalography, Infant, Premature physiology, Occipital Lobe physiology
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate EEG maturational features in preterm infants below 27 weeks postmenstrual age., Methods: EEGs recorded from 5 preterm infants (postmenstrual age 24-26 weeks) were examined and selected maturational features were scored and quantified. The five infants also had serial cranial ultrasound scans (US) and magnetic resonance images of the brain within the first weeks after birth., Results: Background activity was markedly discontinuous in all patients and very variable. Temporal sawtooths occurred but less frequently than in older preterm infants. All 5 infants also showed a particular novel feature, characterized by rhythmic, regularly shaped, medium-high amplitude 4-7 Hz activities, lasting 0.5-3 s and located in the occipital regions. This pattern was symmetrical but sometimes asynchronous., Conclusions: Occipital sawtooth, so called because it shares shape and frequency with temporal sawtooth but has an occipital localisation, constitutes a physiological EEG pattern characteristic of premature infants between 24 and 26 weeks of postmenstrual age.
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- 2000
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13. Periodic lateralized epileptiform discharges (PLEDs) as early indicator of stroke in full-term newborns.
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Randò T, Ricci D, Mercuri E, Frisone MF, Luciano R, Tortorolo G, and Guzzetta F
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- Arm physiopathology, Brain pathology, Electroencephalography, Electromyography, Epilepsy etiology, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Muscle, Skeletal physiopathology, Periodicity, Predictive Value of Tests, Severity of Illness Index, Stroke complications, Epilepsy diagnosis, Stroke diagnosis
- Abstract
We report on periodic lateralized epileptiform discharges (PLEDs) on EEG in two infants with neonatal convulsions. In both neonates, the EEG abnormalities were seen soon after the onset of seizures, at a time when cranial ultrasound scans were thought to be normal. Subsequent Magnetic Resonance Imaging scans demonstrated cerebral infarction in both patients. In one case, the localisation of the lesion on MRI was concordant with that of the EEG abnormalities, as usually observed in adults with focal lesions. The other infant showed similar EEG abnormalities, but her MRI showed a localised lesion in the basal ganglia, which has also been reported to be involved in the genesis of these abnormalities.
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- 2000
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14. Head growth in infants with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy: correlation with neonatal magnetic resonance imaging.
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Mercuri E, Ricci D, Cowan FM, Lessing D, Frisone MF, Haataja L, Counsell SJ, Dubowitz LM, and Rutherford MA
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- Apgar Score, Asphyxia Neonatorum diagnosis, Brain pathology, Cephalometry, Female, Fetal Distress diagnosis, Follow-Up Studies, Head growth & development, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Neurologic Examination, Risk Factors, Brain Damage, Chronic diagnosis, Hypoxia-Ischemia, Brain diagnosis, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Microcephaly diagnosis
- Abstract
Objectives: The aims of the study were to establish the relationship between head growth in the first year of life with the pattern on injury on neonatal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in infants with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) and to relate these to the neurodevelopmental outcome., Methods: Fifty-two term infants who presented at birth with a neonatal encephalopathy consistent with HIE and who had neonatal brain MRI were entered into the study. Head circumference charts were evaluated retrospectively and the head growth over the first year of life compared with the pattern of brain lesions on MRI and with the neurodevelopmental outcome at 1 year of age. Suboptimal head growth was classified as a drop of >2 standard deviations across the percentiles with or without the development of microcephaly, which was classified as a head circumference below the third percentile., Results: There was no statistical difference between the neonatal head circumferences of the infants presenting with HIE and control infants. At 12 months, microcephaly was present in 48% of the infants with HIE, compared with 3% of the controls. Suboptimal head growth was documented in 53% of the infants with HIE, compared with 3% of the controls. Suboptimal head growth was significantly associated with the pattern of brain lesions, in particular to involvement of severe white matter and to severe basal ganglia and thalamic lesions. Suboptimal head growth predicted abnormal neurodevelopmental outcome with a sensitivity of 79% and a specificity of 78%, compared with the presence of microcephaly at 1 year of age, which had a sensitivity of only 65% and a specificity of 73%. The exceptions were explained by infants with only moderate white matter abnormalities who had suboptimal head growth but normal outcome at 1 year of age and by infants with moderate basal ganglia and thalamic lesions only who had normal head growth but significant motor abnormality.
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- 2000
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15. Perceptual-motor, visual and cognitive ability in very low birthweight preschool children without neonatal ultrasound abnormalities.
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Torrioli MG, Frisone MF, Bonvini L, Luciano R, Pasca MG, Lepori R, Tortorolo G, and Guzzetta F
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- Attention physiology, Behavioral Symptoms etiology, Behavioral Symptoms physiopathology, Behavioral Symptoms psychology, Child Behavior physiology, Child, Preschool, Demography, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Intelligence Tests, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Pregnancy, Ultrasonography, Visual Acuity physiology, Cognition physiology, Congenital Abnormalities diagnostic imaging, Infant, Low Birth Weight physiology, Neonatal Screening methods, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Visual Perception physiology
- Abstract
Thirty-six children born preterm with very low birth weight without neonatal brain disorders and normal cerebral ultrasound findings were examined at pre-school age: visual, perceptual motor, attention, behaviour and cognitive assessments were performed in the study group as well as in a control group of term children matched for age, sex and parental educational and occupational status. The results showed a significant lower scoring in perceptual motor skills in the study group, associated with a defect of accuracy in spatial attention and a higher incidence of stereopsis impairment related with perceptual motor disabilities. Behavioural disorders, in terms of emotional maturation and hyperactivity, were significantly more frequent in the study group. To prevent behavioural and learning problems at school, a complete longitudinal assessment including visual functions and perceptual motor abilities seems mandatory in preterm born children, even in the absence of neonatal brain disorders including abnormal cerebral ultrasound findings.
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- 2000
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16. Epileptic disorders with onset in the first year of life: neurological and cognitive outcome.
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Battaglia D, Randò T, Deodato F, Bruccini G, Baglio G, Frisone MF, Pantò T, Tortorella G, and Guzzetta F
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- Age of Onset, Cognition Disorders epidemiology, Cohort Studies, Developmental Disabilities complications, Developmental Disabilities epidemiology, Epilepsy complications, Epilepsy mortality, Female, Humans, Infant, Intellectual Disability complications, Intellectual Disability epidemiology, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Predictive Value of Tests, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Seizures diagnosis, Cognition Disorders complications, Epilepsy diagnosis
- Abstract
We examined prospectively a series of 150 children with epilepsy beginning in the first year of life. We classified the types of epilepsy into five categories: West syndrome, other epileptic encephalopathies, generalized, partial and undetermined epilepsies. Of 150 patients, 15 died; 135 were followed for at least 4 years. In order to define possible factors influencing prognosis we evaluated neurological and cognitive outcome and made percentage comparisons between groups, for aetiology, age of onset, family history of epilepsy, and psychomotor development before onset. Epileptic encephalopathies as well as the symptomatic forms of West syndrome showed a very poor neurological and cognitive outcome. As previously recognized, only cryptogenic forms of West syndrome had a benign prognosis. For the generalized epilepsies, analysis of different factors, namely late age at onset, cryptogenicity and absence of primary cognitive impairment, indicated a good prognosis. In contrast, partial epilepsies usually had a poor outcome, irrespective of the aetiology, whether cryptogenic or symptomatic.
- Published
- 1999
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17. Autonomic gastroenteric disorders in children due to lesions of cranial nerve nuclei, spinal cord and peripheral innervation.
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Guzzetta F, Salvaggio E, and Frisone MF
- Subjects
- Birth Injuries, Child, Humans, Autonomic Nervous System Diseases complications, Cranial Nerve Diseases complications, Digestive System innervation, Gastrointestinal Diseases etiology, Peripheral Nervous System Diseases complications, Spinal Cord Diseases complications
- Published
- 1997
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18. Visual outcome in children with congenital hemiplegia: correlation with MRI findings.
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Mercuri E, Spanò M, Bruccini G, Frisone MF, Trombetta JC, Blandino A, Longo M, and Guzzetta F
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- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Cohort Studies, Female, Functional Laterality, Humans, Incidence, Infant, Newborn, Italy epidemiology, Male, Retrospective Studies, Vision Disorders epidemiology, Vision Screening, Visual Cortex, Visual Pathways, Child Development physiology, Hemiplegia complications, Hemiplegia congenital, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Vision Disorders diagnosis, Vision Disorders etiology
- Abstract
Fourteen children with congenital hemiplegia were studied with a detailed assessment of various aspects of vision (linear acuity, stereopsis, visual fields) and MRI. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of a congenital lesion on visual function. The results showed a very high incidence (78%) of children who had abnormal results on at least one of the visual tests. Visual abnormalities were not correlated with the clinical severity of hemiplegia or with a specific pattern of lesion on MRI. Similarly no constant association could be found between visual structures (optic radiations and primary visual cortex) and visual function. Finally, our results would suggest that all the children with congenital hemiplegia need to be investigated irrespective of the clinical severity or of the type or the extent of the lesion. This would help to identify children with minor visual abnormalities which can affect everyday life performance.
- Published
- 1996
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