25 results on '"Giallonardo A.T."'
Search Results
2. Status epilepticus in epileptic patients: Related syndromes, precipitating factors, treatment and outcome in a video-EEG population-based study
- Author
-
Di Bonaventura, C., Mari, F., Vanacore, N., Fattouch, J., Zarabla, A., Berardelli, A., Manfredi, M., Prencipe, M., and Giallonardo, A.T.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Multidisciplinary approach for diagnosing syncope: a retrospective study on 521 outpatients
- Author
-
Strano, S., Colosimo, C., Sparagna, A., Mazzei, A., Fattouch, J., Giallonardo, A.T., Calcagnini, G., and Bagnato, F.
- Subjects
Fainting -- Diagnosis ,Fainting -- Causes of ,Outpatients -- Care and treatment ,Health ,Psychology and mental health - Published
- 2005
4. LGI1 gene mutation screening in sporadic partial epilepsy with auditory features
- Author
-
Flex, E., Pizzuti, A., Di Bonaventura, C., Douzgou, S., Egeo, G., Fattouch, J., Manfredi, M., Dallapiccola, B., and Giallonardo, A.T.
- Subjects
Gene mutations -- Diagnosis ,Partial epilepsy -- Diagnosis ,Partial epilepsy -- Genetic aspects ,Health - Published
- 2005
5. P.05.13 HIGH PREVALENCE OF FUNCTIONAL CONSTIPATION IN EPILEPTIC PATIENTS
- Author
-
Severi, C., primary, Carabotti, M., additional, Di Bonaventura, C., additional, Badiali, D., additional, Cavalli, A., additional, and Giallonardo, A.T., additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Analysis of simultaneous EEG/FMRI data acquisition in epileptic patients: Comparison of semi-blind ICA, spatial ICA and GLM based methods
- Author
-
Carnì, M., primary, Di Bonaventura, C., additional, Borrazzo, C., additional, Fattouch, J., additional, Giallonardo, A.T., additional, Casciato, S., additional, Morano, A., additional, Di Castro, E., additional, and Colonnese, C., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Epilepsy, unawareness of seizures and driving license: The potential role of 24-hour ambulatory EEG in defining seizure freedom
- Author
-
Fattouch, J., Di Bonaventura, C., Lapenta, L., Casciato, S., Fanella, M., Morano, A., Manfredi, M., and Giallonardo, A.T.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Recurrent partial seizures with ictal yawning as atypical presentation of Hashimoto's encephalopathy (steroid-responsive encephalopathy associated with autoimmune thyroiditis)
- Author
-
Casciato, S., Di Bonaventura, C., Lapenta, L., Fattouch, J., Ferrazzano, G., Fanella, M., Di Fabio, F., Pasquini, M., Amendolea, M.A., Manfredi, M., Prencipe, M., and Giallonardo, A.T.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. E.425 - Analysis of simultaneous EEG/FMRI data acquisition in epileptic patients: Comparison of semi-blind ICA, spatial ICA and GLM based methods
- Author
-
Carnì, M., Di Bonaventura, C., Borrazzo, C., Fattouch, J., Giallonardo, A.T., Casciato, S., Morano, A., Di Castro, E., and Colonnese, C.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Le sequenze Turbo-FLAIR nell'analisi volumetrica ippocampale nell'epilessia temporale farmaco-resistente
- Author
-
Ferone, E., primary, Pierallini, A., additional, Piattella, M.C., additional, Bozzao, A., additional, Prosperi, D., additional, Giallonardo, A.T., additional, Fantozzi, L.M., additional, and Bozzao, L., additional
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Correlation between Stereo-EEG, CT-Scan and Stereotactic Biopsy Data in Epileptic Patients with Low-Grade Gliomas.
- Author
-
Munari, C., Musolino, A., Daumas-Duport, C., Missir, O., Brunet, P., Giallonardo, A.T., Chodkiewicz, J.P., and Bancaud, J.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Le sequenze Turbo-FLAIR nell'analisi volumetrica ippocampale nell'epilessia temporale farmaco-resistente
- Author
-
Ferone, E., Pierallini, A., Piattella, M.C., Bozzao, A., Prosperi, D., Giallonardo, A.T., Fantozzi, L.M., and Bozzao, L.
- Abstract
Scopo del lavoro è stato quello di valutare eventuali alterazioni della intensità di segnale e di volume della regione ippocampale in pazienti affetti da epilessia temporale farmaco-resistente utilizzando sequenze Turbo-FLAIR (Fluid Attenuated Inversion Recovery) e sequenze volumetriche pesate in T1.A tale scopo abbiamo studiato 40 pazienti affetti da epilessia temporale farmaco-resistente utilizzando un apparecchio RM da 1,5 TESLA (NT 15 Philips «Gyroscan»). Sono state utilizzate sequenze Spin-Echo convenzionali, Turbo Spin-Echo, Inversion Recovery, Turbo-FLAIR e sequenze 3D volumetriche sui piani coronali, sequenze Spin-Echo convenzionali sui piani assiali e sagittali. L'intensità del segnale ed il volume della regione ippocampale sono stati valutati mediante analisi semi-quantitative automatiche eseguite con una workstation SUN. Abbiamo riscontrato una differenza significativa dei valori dell'intensità di segnale dei due ippocampi in 22 pazienti utilizzando le sequenze FLAIR. In 8 di questi pazienti non erano invece presenti differenze significative con le sequenze Spin-Echo convenzionali e Turbo Spin-Echo. L'analisi volumetrica ha mostrato un assottigliamento della corteccia dell'ippocampo in 12 dei 22 pazienti che presentavano anomalie dell'intensità del segnale.I dati del presente studio suggeriscono una maggiore sensibilità delle sequenze Turbo-FLAIR nell'evidenziare alterazioni dell'intensità di segnale della regione dell'ippocampo.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Correlation between Stereo-EEG, CT-Scan and Stereotactic Biopsy Data in Epileptic Patients with Low-Grade Gliomas
- Author
-
Munari, C., primary, Musolino, A., additional, Daumas-Duport, C., additional, Missir, O., additional, Brunet, P., additional, Giallonardo, A.T., additional, Chodkiewicz, J.P., additional, and Bancaud, J., additional
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Brivaracetam as add-on treatment in patients with post-stroke epilepsy: real-world data from the BRIVAracetam add-on First Italian netwoRk Study (BRIVAFIRST)
- Author
-
Simona Lattanzi, Laura Canafoglia, Maria Paola Canevini, Sara Casciato, Emanuele Cerulli Irelli, Valentina Chiesa, Filippo Dainese, Giovanni De Maria, Giuseppe Didato, Giancarlo Di Gennaro, Giovanni Falcicchio, Martina Fanella, Edoardo Ferlazzo, Massimo Gangitano, Angela La Neve, Oriano Mecarelli, Elisa Montalenti, Alessandra Morano, Federico Piazza, Chiara Pizzanelli, Patrizia Pulitano, Federica Ranzato, Eleonora Rosati, Laura Tassi, Carlo Di Bonaventura, Angela Alicino, Michele Ascoli, Giovanni Assenza, Federica Avorio, Valeria Badioni, Paola Banfi, Emanuele Bartolini, Luca Manfredi Basili, Vincenzo Belcastro, Simone Beretta, Irene Berto, Martina Biggi, Giuseppe Billo, Giovanni Boero, Paolo Bonanni, Jole Bongorno, Francesco Brigo, Emanuele Caggia, Claudia Cagnetti, Carmen Calvello, Edward Cesnik, Gigliola Chianale, Domenico Ciampanelli, Roberta Ciuffini, Dario Cocito, Donato Colella, Margerita Contento, Cinzia Costa, Eduardo Cumbo, Alfredo D'Aniello, Francesco Deleo, Jacopo C DiFrancesco, Roberta Di Giacomo, Alessandra Di Liberto, Elisabetta Domina, Fedele Dono, Vania Durante, Maurizio Elia, Anna Estraneo, Giacomo Evangelista, Maria Teresa Faedda, Ylenia Failli, Elisa Fallica, Jinane Fattouch, Alessandra Ferrari, Florinda Ferreri, Giacomo Fisco, Davide Fonti, Francesco Fortunato, Nicoletta Foschi, Teresa Francavilla, Rosita Galli, Stefano Gazzina, Anna Teresa Giallonardo, Filippo Sean Giorgi, Loretta Giuliano, Francesco Habetswallner, Francesca Izzi, Benedetta Kassabian, Angelo Labate, Concetta Luisi, Matteo Magliani, Giulia Maira, Luisa Mari, Daniela Marino, Addolorata Mascia, Alessandra Mazzeo, Chiara Milano, Stefano Meletti, Annacarmen Nilo, Biagio Orlando, Francesco Paladin, Maria Grazia Pascarella, Chiara Pastori, Giada Pauletto, Alessia Peretti, Gabriella Perri, Marianna Pezzella, Marta Piccioli, Pietro Pignatta, Nicola Pilolli, Francesco Pisani, Laura Rosa Pisani, Fabio Placidi, Patrizia Pollicino, Vittoria Porcella, Silvia Pradella, Monica Puligheddu, Stefano Quadri, Pier Paolo Quarato, Rui Quintas, Rosaria Renna, Giada Ricciardo Rizzo, Adriana Rum, Enrico Michele Salamone, Ersilia Savastano, Maria Sessa, David Stokelj, Elena Tartara, Mario Tombini, Gemma Tumminelli, Anna Elisabetta Vaudano, Maria Ventura, Ilaria Viganò, Emanuela Viglietta, Aglaia Vignoli, Flavio Villani, Elena Zambrelli, Lelia Zummo, Lattanzi S., Canafoglia L., Canevini M.P., Casciato S., Cerulli Irelli E., Chiesa V., Dainese F., De Maria G., Didato G., Di Gennaro G., Falcicchio G., Fanella M., Ferlazzo E., Gangitano M., La Neve A., Mecarelli O., Montalenti E., Morano A., Piazza F., Pizzanelli C., Pulitano P., Ranzato F., Rosati E., Tassi L., Di Bonaventura C., Alicino A., Ascoli M., Assenza G., Avorio F., Badioni V., Banfi P., Bartolini E., Basili L.M., Belcastro V., Beretta S., Berto I., Biggi M., Billo G., Boero G., Bonanni P., Bongiorno J., Brigo F., Caggia E., Cagnetti C., Calvello C., Cesnik E., Chianale G., Ciampanelli D., Ciuffini R., Cocito D., Colella D., Contento M., Costa C., Cumbo E., D'Aniello A., Deleo F., DiFrancesco J.C., Di Giacomo R., Di Liberto A., Domina E., Dono F., Durante V., Elia M., Estraneo A., Evangelista G., Faedda M.T., Failli Y., Fallica E., Fattouch J., Ferrari A., Ferreri F., Fisco G., Fonti D., Fortunato F., Foschi N., Francavilla T., Galli R., Gazzina S., Giallonardo A.T., Giorgi F.S., Giuliano L., Habetswallner F., Izzi F., Kassabian B., Labate A., Luisi C., Magliani M., Maira G., Mari L., Marino D., Mascia A., Mazzeo A., Milano C., Meletti S., Nilo A., Orlando B., Paladin F., Pascarella M.G., Pastori C., Pauletto G., Peretti A., Perri G., Pezzella M., Piccioli M., Pignatta P., Pilolli N., Pisani F., Pisani L.R., Placidi F., Pollicino P., Porcella V., Pradella S., Puligheddu M., Quadri S., Quarato P.P., Quintas R., Renna R., Rizzo G.R., Rum A., Salamone E.M., Savastano E., Sessa M., Stokelj D., Tartara E., Tombini M., Tumminelli G., Vaudano A.E., Ventura M., Vigano I., Viglietta E., Vignoli A., Villani F., Zambrelli E., and Zummo L.
- Subjects
Adult ,Antiseizure medication ,Brivaracetam ,Cerebrovascular diseases ,Focal seizures ,Stroke ,Settore MED/26 ,Antiseizure medication, Brivaracetam, Focal seizures, Stroke, Cerebrovascular diseases ,Double-Blind Method ,Drug Therapy ,Seizures ,Humans ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Epilepsy ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Pyrrolidinones ,Treatment Outcome ,Neurology ,Italy ,Combination ,Anticonvulsants ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Objective: Post-stroke epilepsy (PSE) is one of the most common causes of acquired epilepsy and accounts for about 10-15% of all newly diagnosed epilepsy cases. However, evidence about the clinical profile of antiseizure medications in the PSE setting is currently limited. Brivaracetam (BRV) is a rationally developed compound characterized by high-affinity binding to synaptic vesicle protein 2A. The aim of this study was to assess the 12-month effectiveness and tolerability of adjunctive BRV in patients with PSE treated in a real-world setting. Methods: This was a subgroup analysis of patients with PSE included in the BRIVAracetam add-on First Italian netwoRk Study (BRIVAFIRST). The BRIVAFIRST was a 12-month retrospective, multicentre study including adult patients prescribed adjunctive BRV. Effectiveness outcomes included the rates of seizure response (≥50% reduction in baseline seizure frequency), seizure‐freedom, and treatment discontinuation. Safety and tolerability outcomes included the rate of treatment discontinuation due to adverse events (AEs) and the incidence of AEs. Results: Patients with PSE included in the BRIVAFIRST were 75 and had a median age of 57 (interquartile range, 42-66) years. The median daily doses of BRV at 3, 6, and 12 months from starting treatment were 100 (100-150) mg, 125 (100-200) mg and 100 (100-200) mg, respectively. At 12 months, 32 (42.7%) patients had a reduction in their baseline seizure frequency by at least 50%, and the seizure freedom rates was 26/75 (34.7%). During the 1-year study period, 10 (13.3%) patients discontinued BRV. The reasons of treatment withdrawal were insufficient efficacy in 6 (8.0%) patients and poor tolerability in 4 (5.3%) patients. Adverse events were reported by 13 (20.3%) patients and were rated as mild in 84.6% and moderate in 15.4% of cases. Significance: Adjunctive BRV was efficacious and generally well-tolerated when used in patients with PSE in clinical practice. Adjunctive BRV can be a suitable therapeutic option for patients with PSE.
- Published
- 2022
15. Progressive Myoclonus Epilepsies
- Author
-
Edoardo Ferlazzo, Laura Licchetta, Alessandro Filla, Samuel F. Berkovic, Roberto Michelucci, Paolo Tinuper, Martina Fanella, Silvana Franceschetti, Anna Teresa Giallonardo, Carolina Courage, Federico Zara, Antonio Gambardella, Teresa Anna Cantisani, Patrizia Riguzzi, Barbara Castellotti, Cinzia Gellera, Pasquale Striano, Carlo Di Bonaventura, Tiziana Granata, Melanie Bahlo, Laura Canafoglia, Karen Oliver, Angela La Neve, Anna-Elina Lehesjoki, Adriana Magaudda, HUSLAB, Medicum, Department of Medical and Clinical Genetics, Canafoglia L., Franceschetti S., Gambardella A., Striano P., Giallonardo A.T., Tinuper P., Di Bonaventura C., Michelucci R., Ferlazzo E., Granata T., Magaudda A., Licchetta L., Filla A., la Neve A., Riguzzi P., Cantisani T.A., Fanella M., Castellotti B., Gellera C., Bahlo M., Zara F., Courage C., Lehesjoki A.-E., Oliver K.L., and Berkovic S.F.
- Subjects
Biology ,DNA sequencing ,3124 Neurology and psychiatry ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Sibling ,Gene ,myoclonus epilepsy ,Genetics (clinical) ,030304 developmental biology ,Genetic testing ,Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,3112 Neurosciences ,next generation sequency ,Disease gene identification ,3. Good health ,CHD2 ,3121 General medicine, internal medicine and other clinical medicine ,Epilepsy syndromes ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Myoclonus ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background and ObjectivesTo assess the current diagnostic yield of genetic testing for the progressive myoclonus epilepsies (PMEs) of an Italian series described in 2014 where Unverricht-Lundborg and Lafora diseases accounted for ∼50% of the cohort.MethodsOf 47/165 unrelated patients with PME of indeterminate genetic origin, 38 underwent new molecular evaluations. Various next-generation sequencing (NGS) techniques were applied including gene panel analysis (n = 7) and/or whole-exome sequencing (WES) (WES singleton n = 29, WES trio n = 7, and WES sibling n = 4). In 1 family, homozygosity mapping was followed by targeted NGS. Clinically, the patients were grouped in 4 phenotypic categories: “Unverricht-Lundborg disease-like PME,” “late-onset PME,” “PME plus developmental delay,” and “PME plus dementia.”ResultsSixteen of 38 (42%) unrelated patients reached a positive diagnosis, increasing the overall proportion of solved families in the total series from 72% to 82%. Likely pathogenic variants were identified in NEU1 (2 families), CERS1 (1 family), and in 13 nonfamilial patients in KCNC1 (3), DHDDS (3), SACS, CACNA2D2, STUB1, AFG3L2, CLN6, NAXE, and CHD2. Across the different phenotypic categories, the diagnostic rate was similar, and the same gene could be found in different phenotypic categories.DiscussionThe application of NGS technology to unsolved patients with PME has revealed a collection of very rare genetic causes. Pathogenic variants were detected in both established PME genes and in genes not previously associated with PME, but with progressive ataxia or with developmental encephalopathies. With a diagnostic yield >80%, PME is one of the best genetically defined epilepsy syndromes.
- Published
- 2021
16. Molecular chaperones and mirnas in epilepsy: Pathogenic implications and therapeutic prospects
- Author
-
Marco de Curtis, Leila Zummo, Carlo Di Bonaventura, Anna Teresa Giallonardo, Celeste Caruso Bavisotto, Martina Fanella, Alessandra Vitale, Everly Conway de Macario, Alberto J.L. Macario, Antonella Marino Gammazza, Rita Garbelli, Francesco Cappello, Zummo L., Vitale A.M., Caruso Bavisotto C., De Curtis M., Garbelli R., Giallonardo A.T., Di Bonaventura C., Fanella M., Conway de Macario E., Cappello F., Macario A.J.L., and Gammazza A.M.
- Subjects
QH301-705.5 ,Adverse outcomes ,Review ,Disease ,Bioinformatics ,Catalysis ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Epilepsy ,chaperone system ,microRNA ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Biology (General) ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,QD1-999 ,Molecular Biology ,Heat-Shock Proteins ,Spectroscopy ,Neuroinflammation ,miRNA ,High prevalence ,biology ,business.industry ,Organic Chemistry ,molecular chaperones ,General Medicine ,temporal lobe epilepsy ,medicine.disease ,Computer Science Applications ,MicroRNAs ,Chemistry ,Chaperone (protein) ,Molecular targets ,biology.protein ,epilepsy ,Anticonvulsants ,business - Abstract
Epilepsy is a pathologic condition with high prevalence and devastating consequences for the patient and its entourage. Means for accurate diagnosis of type, patient monitoring for predicting seizures and follow up, and efficacious treatment are desperately needed. To improve this adverse outcome, miRNAs and the chaperone system (CS) are promising targets to understand pathogenic mechanisms and for developing theranostics applications. miRNAs implicated in conditions known or suspected to favor seizures such as neuroinflammation, to promote epileptic tolerance and neuronal survival, to regulate seizures, and others showing variations in expression levels related to seizures are promising candidates as useful biomarkers for diagnosis and patient monitoring, and as targets for developing novel therapies. Components of the CS are also promising as biomarkers and as therapeutic targets, since they participate in epileptogenic pathways and in cytoprotective mechanisms in various epileptogenic brain areas, even if what they do and how is not yet clear. The data in this review should help in the identification of molecular targets among the discussed miRNAs and CS components for research aiming at understanding epileptogenic mechanisms and, subsequently, develop means for predicting/preventing seizures and treating the disease.
- Published
- 2021
17. Differences in visual information processing style between Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy with and without photosensitivity
- Author
-
Francesco Di Sabato, Carlo Di Bonaventura, Filippo Brighina, Marzia Buonfiglio, Giuliano Avanzini, Silvia Mandillo, Anna Teresa Giallonardo, Mariarita Albini, Buonfiglio M., Albini M., Mandillo S., Brighina F., Di Sabato F., Di Bonaventura C., Giallonardo A.T., and Avanzini G.
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Audiology ,Epilepsy, Reflex ,Visual processing ,Idiopathic generalized epilepsy ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Epilepsy ,Cognition ,Photosensitive epilepsy ,Photosensitivity ,Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy ,Analytic cognitive style ,Habituation ,Auditory processing ,medicine ,Humans ,Association (psychology) ,business.industry ,Electroencephalography ,medicine.disease ,Neurology ,Evoked Potentials, Visual ,Epilepsy, Generalized ,Neurology (clinical) ,Analysis of variance ,business - Abstract
Purpose: Recently, altered visual cortical processes i.e., lack of habituation to visual evoked potentials (VEP), has been highlighted in both photosensitive epilepsy and in a specific i.e., analytic mode of processing visual inputs. In this study we aimed at evaluating the relationship between photosensitivity (PS) and analytic style of processing visual information, in a sample of 30 patients with Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy (IGE) and matched healthy controls. Methods: At our Epilepsy unit of the Sapienza University of Rome, we consecutively enrolled 15 patients with IGE with PSand matched them with 15 patients with IGE without PS and 15 Healthy Volunteers. All patients underwent EEG recording in basal conditions during hyperventilation (3 Min), and intermittent light stimulation. The most effective frequencies comprised from 12 to 16 Hz. The instruments used to gather psychological cognitive behavioral data, consisted of participation in two tests: the Sternberg-Wagner Self-Assessment Inventory and the Mariani Learning Style Questionnaire. Results: Compared to controls, both IGE groups show significantly higher scores for the analytic style (One-way ANOVA, F(2,44) = 110.3, p < 0.0001). Epilepsy groups thereby showed very distinctive cognitive styles as measured with the Sternberg test. In the visual style, scores of the photosensitive Individuals with IGE were significantly higher than the non-photosensitive individuals with IGE (p < 0.0001, Tukey's post hoc test). Conclusions: An association between analytic style of processing visual information and PS in IGE has been shown. The common neurophysiological features between these two factors, suggest the possibility to evaluate this cognitive behavior as a potential target for nonpharmacological therapeutic strategies in photosensitive epilepsy.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Adjunctive Brivaracetam in Focal Epilepsy: Real-World Evidence from the BRIVAracetam add-on First Italian netwoRk STudy (BRIVAFIRST)
- Author
-
Lattanzi, S., Canafoglia, L., Canevini, M. P., Casciato, S., Chiesa, V., Dainese, F., De Maria, G., Didato, G., Falcicchio, G., Fanella, M., Ferlazzo, E., Fisco, G., Gangitano, M., Giallonardo, A. T., Giorgi, F. S., La Neve, A., Mecarelli, O., Montalenti, E., Piazza, F., Pulitano, P., Quarato, P. P., Ranzato, F., Rosati, E., Tassi, L., Di Bonaventura, C., Alicino, A., Ascoli, M., Assenza, G., Avorio, F., Badioni, V., Banfi, P., Bartolini, E., Basili, L. M., Belcastro, V., Beretta, S., Berto, I., Biggi, M., Billo, G., Boero, G., Bonanni, P., Bongorno, J., Brigo, F., Caggia, E., Cagnetti, C., Calvello, C., Irelli, E. C., Cesnik, E., Chianale, G., Ciampanelli, D., Ciuffini, R., Cocito, D., Colella, D., Contento, M., Costa, C., Cumbo, E., D'Aniello, A., Deleo, F., Difrancesco, J. C., Di Gennaro, G., Di Giacomo, R., Di Liberto, A., Domina, E., Donato, F., Dono, F., Durante, V., Elia, M., Estraneo, A., Evangelista, G., Faedda, M. T., Failli, Y., Fallica, E., Fattouch, J., Ferrari, A., Ferreri, F., Fonti, D., Fortunato, F., Foschi, N., Francavilla, T., Galli, R., Gazzina, S., Giuliano, L., Habetswallner, F., Izzi, F., Kassabian, B., Labate, A., Luisi, C., Magliani, M., Maira, G., Mari, L., Marino, D., Mascia, A., Mazzeo, A., Meletti, S., Morano, A., Nilo, A., Orlando, B., Paladin, F., Pascarella, M. G., Pastori, C., Pauletto, G., Peretti, A., Perri, G., Pezzella, M., Piccioli, M., Pignatta, P., Pilolli, N., Pisani, F., Pisani, L. R., Placidi, F., Pollicino, P., Porcella, V., Pradella, S., Puligheddu, M., Quadri, S., Quintas, R., Renna, R., Rossi, J., Rum, A., Salamone, E. M., Savastano, E., Sessa, M., Stokelj, D., Tartara, E., Tombini, M., Tumminelli, G., Ventura, M., Vigano, I., Viglietta, E., Vignoli, A., Villani, F., Zambrelli, E., Zummo, L., Lattanzi S., Canafoglia L., Canevini M.P., Casciato S., Chiesa V., Dainese F., De Maria G., Didato G., Falcicchio G., Fanella M., Ferlazzo E., Fisco G., Gangitano M., Giallonardo A.T., Giorgi F.S., La Neve A., Mecarelli O., Montalenti E., Piazza F., Pulitano P., Quarato P.P., Ranzato F., Rosati E., Tassi L., and Di Bonaventura C.
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Context (language use) ,Brivaracetam ,medicine.disease ,Discontinuation ,law.invention ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Epilepsy ,Randomized controlled trial ,Tolerability ,focal epilepsy, add-on therapy, seizure ,law ,Concomitant ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Neurology (clinical) ,Levetiracetam ,Original Research Article ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: In randomized controlled trials, add-on brivaracetam (BRV) reduced seizure frequency in patients with drug-resistant focal epilepsy. Studies performed in a naturalistic setting are a useful complement to characterize the drug profile. Objective: This multicentre study assessed the effectiveness and tolerability of adjunctive BRV in a large population of patients with focal epilepsy in the context of real-world clinical practice. Methods: The BRIVAFIRST (BRIVAracetam add-on First Italian netwoRk STudy) was a retrospective, multicentre study including adult patients prescribed adjunctive BRV. Patients with focal epilepsy and 12-month follow-up were considered. Main outcomes included the rates of seizure‐freedom, seizure response (≥50% reduction in baseline seizure frequency), and treatment discontinuation. The incidence of adverse events (AEs) was also considered. Analyses by levetiracetam (LEV) status and concomitant use of strong enzyme-inducing antiseizure medications (EiASMs) and sodium channel blockers (SCBs) were performed. Results: A total of 1029 patients with a median age of 45years (33–56) was included. At 12 months, 169 (16.4%) patients were seizure-free and 383 (37.2%) were seizure responders. The rate of seizure freedom was 22.3% in LEV-naive patients, 7.1% in patients with prior LEV use and discontinuation due to insufficient efficacy, and 31.2% in patients with prior LEV use and discontinuation due to AEs (p 
- Published
- 2021
19. Antidepressant effect of vagal nerve stimulation in epilepsy patients: a systematic review
- Author
-
Giovanni Assenza, Stefano Meletti, Loretta Giuliano, Roberto Michelucci, Ettore Beghi, Mario Tombini, Vincenzo Di Lazzaro, Lorenzo Ricci, Francesca Bisulli, Amedeo Bianchi, Umberto Aguglia, Vincenzo Belcastro, Fabrizio A. de Falco, Angelo Labate, Pasquale Striano, Francesco Pisani, Paolo Tinuper, Annapia Verri, Anna Teresa Giallonardo, Sara Gasparini, Silvana Franceschetti, Sara Casciato, Barbara Mostacci, Giancarlo Di Gennaro, Edoardo Ferlazzo, Alessandra Morano, Vincenzo Pizza, Angela La Neve, Flavio Villani, Paolo Benna, Gaetano Zaccara, Carlo Di Bonaventura, Giuliano Avanzini, Jacopo Lanzone, Adriana Magaudda, Ferdinando Sartucci, Vittoria Cianci, Assenza G., Tombini M., Lanzone J., Ricci L., Di Lazzaro V., Casciato S., Morano A., Giallonardo A.T., Di Bonaventura C., Beghi E., Ferlazzo E., Gasparini S., Giuliano L., Pisani F., Benna P., Bisulli F., De Falco F.A., Franceschetti S., La Neve A., Meletti S., Mostacci B., Sartucci F., Striano P., Villani F., Aguglia U., Avanzini G., Belcastro V., Bianchi A., Cianci V., Labate A., Magaudda A., Michelucci R., Verri A., Zaccara G., Pizza V., Tinuper P., and Di Gennaro G.
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Vagus Nerve Stimulation ,Vagal nerve ,MEDLINE ,Drug-resistant epilepsy ,Stimulation ,Dermatology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Depression ,Systematic review ,Vagal nerve stimulation ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Comorbidity ,Antidepressive Agents ,Palliative Therapy ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Treatment Outcome ,Quality of Life ,Antidepressant ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background: Vagal nerve stimulation (VNS) is an effective palliative therapy in drug-resistant epileptic patients and is also approved as a therapy for treatment-resistant depression. Depression is a frequent comorbidity in epilepsy and it affects the quality of life of patients more than the seizure frequency itself. The aim of this systematic review is to analyze the available literature about the VNS effect on depressive symptoms in epileptic patients. Material and methods: A comprehensive search of PubMed, Medline, Scopus, and Google Scholar was performed, and results were included up to January 2020. All studies concerning depressive symptom assessment in epileptic patients treated with VNS were included. Results: Nine studies were included because they fulfilled inclusion criteria. Six out of nine papers reported a positive effect of VNS on depressive symptoms. Eight out of nine studies did not find any correlation between seizure reduction and depressive symptom amelioration, as induced by VNS. Clinical scales for depression, drug regimens, and age of patients were broadly different among the examined studies. Conclusions: Reviewed studies strongly suggest that VNS ameliorates depressive symptoms in drug-resistant epileptic patients and that the VNS effect on depression is uncorrelated to seizure response. However, more rigorous studies addressing this issue are encouraged.
- Published
- 2020
20. Do neurologists agree in diagnosing drug resistance in adults with focal epilepsy?
- Author
-
Stefano Meletti, Paolo Tinuper, Angela La Neve, Marco Mula, Maurizio Elia, Leila Zummo, Gaetano Zaccara, Domenico Consoli, Emilio Perucca, Bruno Ferrò, Alfonso Iudice, Anna Teresa Giallonardo, Zaccara G., Mula M., Ferro B., Consoli D., Elia M., Giallonardo A.T., Iudice A., La Neve A., Meletti S., Tinuper P., Zummo L., and Perucca E.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Drug Resistant Epilepsy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Neurology ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Treatment outcome ,antiepileptic drugs ,classification ,drug-resistant epilepsy ,epilepsy ,ILAE definition ,reliability ,Neurology (clinical) ,Drug resistance ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,antiepileptic drug ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Neurologists ,Prospective Studies ,Cooperative Behavior ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Inter-rater reliability ,030104 developmental biology ,Anticonvulsants ,Female ,Epilepsies, Partial ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Kappa - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate interrater agreement in categorizing treatment outcomes and drug responsiveness status according to the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) definition of drug-resistant epilepsy. Methods: A total of 1053 adults with focal epilepsy considered by the investigators to meet ILAE criteria for drug resistance were enrolled consecutively at 43 centers and followed up prospectively for 18-34months. Treatment outcomes for all antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) used up to enrollment (retrospective assessment), and on an AED newly introduced at enrollment, were categorized by individual investigators and by 2 rotating members of a 16-member expert panel (EP) that reviewed the patient records independently. Interrater agreement was tested by Cohen’s kappa (k) statistics and rated according to Landis and Koch’s criteria. Results: Agreement between EP members in categorizing outcomes on the newly introduced AED was almost perfect (90.1%, k=0.84, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.80-0.87), whereas agreement between the EP and individual investigators was moderate (70.4%, k=0.57, 95% CI 0.53-0.61). Similarly, categorization of outcomes on previously used AEDs was almost perfect between EP members (91.7%, k=0.83, 95% CI 0.81-0.84) and moderate between the EP and investigators (68.2%, k=0.50, 95% CI 0.48-0.52). Disagreement was related predominantly to outcomes considered to be treatment failures by the investigators but categorized as undetermined by the EP. Overall, 19% of patients classified as having drug-resistant epilepsy by the investigators were considered by the EP to have “undefined responsiveness.”. Significance: Interrater agreement in categorizing treatment outcomes according to ILAE criteria ranges from moderate to almost perfect. Nearly 1 in 5 patients considered by enrolling neurologists to be “drug-resistant” were classified by the EP as having “undefined responsiveness.”.
- Published
- 2019
21. Management of psychogenic non-epileptic seizures: a multidisciplinary approach
- Author
-
S. Gasparini 1, 2, E. Beghi 3, E. Ferlazzo 1, 4, M. Beghi 5, V. Belcastro 6, K.P. Biermann 7, G. Bottini 8, G. Capovilla 9, R.A. Cervellione 10, V. Cianci 2, G. Coppola 11, C.M. Cornaggia 12, P. De Fazio1 3, S. De Masi 7, G. De Sarro 14, M. Elia 15, G. Erba 16, L. Fusco 17, A. Gambardella 1, V. Gentile1 8, A. T. Giallonardo 19, R. Guerrini 20, F. Ingravallo 22, A. Iudice 23, A. Labate 1, E. Lucenteforte 21, A. Magaudda 24, L. Mumoli 1, C. Papagno 25, G.B. Pesce 18, E. Pucci 27, P. Ricci 28, A. Romeo 29, R. Quintas 30, C. Sueri 2, G. Vitaliti 31, R. Zoia 32, U. Aguglia 1, Gasparini, S, Beghi, E, Ferlazzo, E, Beghi, M, Belcastro, V, Biermann, K, Bottini, G, Capovilla, G, Cervellione, R, Cianci, V, Coppola, G, Cornaggia, C, De Fazio, P, De Masi, S, De Sarro, G, Elia, M, Erba, G, Fusco, L, Gambardella, A, Gentile, V, Giallonardo, A, Guerrini, R, Ingravallo, F, Iudice, A, Labate, A, Lucenteforte, E, Magaudda, A, Mumoli, L, Papagno, C, Pesce, G, Pucci, E, Ricci, P, Romeo, A, Quintas, R, Sueri, C, Vitaliti, G, Zoia, R, Aguglia, U, Gasparini S., Beghi E., Ferlazzo E., Beghi M., Belcastro V., Biermann K.P., Bottini G., Capovilla G., Cervellione R.A., Cianci V., Coppola G., Cornaggia C.M., De Fazio P., De Masi S., De Sarro G., Elia M., Erba G., Fusco L., Gambardella A., Gentile V., Giallonardo A.T., Guerrini R., Ingravallo F., Iudice A., Labate A., Lucenteforte E., Magaudda A., Mumoli L., Papagno C., Pesce G.B., Pucci E., Ricci P., Romeo A., Quintas R., Sueri C., Vitaliti G., Zoia R., and Aguglia U.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,conversion disorder, EEG, epilepsy ,EEG ,conversion disorder ,epilepsy ,Psychophysiologic Disorder ,NO ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Seizures ,Psychogenic non-epileptic seizures ,medicine ,Psychogenic disease ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Psychiatry ,Child ,Conversion disorder ,business.industry ,Electroencephalography ,Evidence-based medicine ,Bioethics ,medicine.disease ,Personality disorders ,Psychophysiologic Disorders ,Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,Anxiety ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Human ,conversion disorder, EEG, epilepsy, Adult, Child, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Male, Psychophysiologic Disorders, Seizures - Abstract
The International League against Epilepsy (ILAE) proposed a diagnostic scheme for psychogenic non-epileptic seizure (PNES). The debate on ethical aspects of the diagnostic procedures is ongoing, the treatment is not standardized and management might differ according to age group. The objective was to reach an expert and stakeholder consensus on PNES management. A board comprising adult and child neurologists, neuropsychologists, psychiatrists, pharmacologists, experts in forensic medicine and bioethics as well as patients’ representatives was formed. The board chose five main topics regarding PNES: diagnosis; ethical issues; psychiatric comorbidities; psychological treatment; and pharmacological treatment. After a systematic review of the literature, the board met in a consensus conference in Catanzaro (Italy). Further consultations using a model of Delphi panel were held. The global level of evidence for all topics was low. Even though most questions were formulated separately for children/adolescents and adults, no major age-related differences emerged. The board established that the approach to PNES diagnosis should comply with ILAE recommendations. Seizure induction was considered ethical, preferring the least invasive techniques. The board recommended looking carefully for mood disturbances, personality disorders and psychic trauma in persons with PNES and considering cognitive-behavioural therapy as a first-line psychological approach and pharmacological treatment to manage comorbid conditions, namely anxiety and depression. Psychogenic non-epileptic seizure management should be multidisciplinary. High-quality long-term studies are needed to standardize PNES management.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Progressive myoclonic epilepsies Definitive and still undetermined causes
- Author
-
Franceschetti S., Michelucci R., Canafoglia L., Striano P., Gambardella A., Magaudda A., La Neve A., Ferlazzo E., Gobbi G., Giallonardo A. T., Capovilla G., Visani E., Panzica F., Avanzini G., Tassinari C. A., Bianchi A., Zara F., TINUPER, PAOLO, BISULLI, FRANCESCA, POSAR, ANNIO, SANTUCCI, MARGHERITA, LICCHETTA, LAURA, Franceschetti S., Michelucci R., Canafoglia L., Striano P., Gambardella A., Magaudda A., Tinuper P., La Neve A., Ferlazzo E., Gobbi G., Giallonardo A.T., Capovilla G., Visani E., Panzica F., Avanzini G., Tassinari C.A., Bianchi A., Zara F., Bisulli F., Posar A., Santucci M., Licchetta L., and (Collaborative LICE study group on PMEs)
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Adolescent ,Disease ,Lafora body disease ,Article ,Lafora disease ,Young Adult ,Epilepsy ,Progressive ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Unverricht-Lundborg Syndrome ,Myoclonic Epilepsies ,Cluster Analysis ,Humans ,Medicine ,Young adult ,progressive myoclonic epilepsies ,diagnosis/physiopathology/therapy ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,Myoclonic Epilepsies, Progressive ,medicine.disease ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Italy ,Lafora Disease ,Neurology (clinical) ,diagnosis/physiopathology/therapy, Epilepsy ,Etiology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Myoclonus ,Psychomotor delay - Abstract
Objective: To define the clinical spectrum and etiology of progressive myoclonic epilepsies (PMEs) in Italy using a database developed by the Genetics Commission of the Italian League against Epilepsy. Methods: We collected clinical and laboratory data from patients referred to 25 Italian epilepsy centers regardless of whether a positive causative factor was identified. PMEs of undetermined origins were grouped using 2-step cluster analysis. Results: We collected clinical data from 204 patients, including 77 with a diagnosis of Unverricht-Lundborg disease and 37 with a diagnosis of Lafora body disease; 31 patients had PMEs due to rarer genetic causes, mainly neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses. Two more patients had celiac disease. Despite extensive investigation, we found no definitive etiology for 57 patients. Cluster analysis indicated that these patients could be grouped into 2 clusters defined by age at disease onset, age at myoclonus onset, previous psychomotor delay, seizure characteristics, photosensitivity, associated signs other than those included in the cardinal definition of PME, and pathologic MRI findings. Conclusions: Information concerning the distribution of different genetic causes of PMEs may provide a framework for an updated diagnostic workup. Phenotypes of the patients with PME of undetermined cause varied widely. The presence of separate clusters suggests that novel forms of PME are yet to be clinically and genetically characterized.
- Published
- 2014
23. Genome-wide linkage meta-analysis identifies susceptibility loci at 2q34 and 13q31.3 for genetic generalized epilepsies
- Author
-
EPICURE Consortium, Leu C., de Kovel C. G., Zara F., Striano P., Pezzella M., Robbiano A., Bianchi A., Coppola A., Giallonardo A. T., Beccaria F., Trenité D. K., Lindhout D., Gaus V., Schmitz B., Janz D., Weber Y. G., Becker F., Lerche H., Kleefuss Lie A. A., Hallman K., Kunz W. S., Elger C. E., Muhle H., Stephani U., Møller R. S., Hjalgrim H., Mullen S., Scheffer I. E., Berkovic S. F., Everett K. V., Gardiner M. R., Marini C., Guerrini R., Lehesjoki A. E., Siren A., Nabbout R., Baulac S., Leguern E., Serratosa J. M., Rosenow F., Feucht M., Unterberger I., Covanis A., Suls A., Weckhuysen S., Kaneva R., Caglayan H., Turkdogan D., Baykan B., Bebek N., Ozbek U., Hempelmann A., Schulz H., Rüschendorf F., Trucks H., Nürnberg P., Avanzini G., Koeleman B. P., Sander T., BISULLI, FRANCESCA, TINUPER, PAOLO, YÜCESAN, EMRAH, EPICURE Consortium, Leu C., de Kovel C.G., Zara F., Striano P., Pezzella M., Robbiano A., Bianchi A., Bisulli F., Coppola A., Giallonardo A.T., Beccaria F., Trenité D.K., Lindhout D., Gaus V., Schmitz B., Janz D., Weber Y.G., Becker F., Lerche H., Kleefuss-Lie A.A., Hallman K., Kunz W.S., Elger C.E., Muhle H., Stephani U., Møller R.S., Hjalgrim H., Mullen S., Scheffer I.E., Berkovic S.F., Everett K.V., Gardiner M.R., Marini C., Guerrini R., Lehesjoki A.E., Siren A., Nabbout R., Baulac S., Leguern E., Serratosa J.M., Rosenow F., Feucht M., Unterberger I., Covanis A., Suls A., Weckhuysen S., Kaneva R., Caglayan H., Turkdogan D., Baykan B., Bebek N., Ozbek U., Hempelmann A., Schulz H., Rüschendorf F., Trucks H., Nürnberg P., Avanzini G., Koeleman B.P., Sander T., and Tinuper P.
- Subjects
Male ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 13 ,Genotype ,Genetic Linkage ,Chromosome Mapping ,complex inheritance ,Pedigree ,genetic generalized epilepsy ,myoclonic seizure ,Phenotype ,Genetic Loci ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 2 ,Humans ,Epilepsy, Generalized ,Family ,Female ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,linkage analysis ,absence seizure ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
PURPOSE: Genetic generalized epilepsies (GGEs) have a lifetime prevalence of 0.3% with heritability estimates of 80%. A considerable proportion of families with siblings affected by GGEs presumably display an oligogenic inheritance. The present genome-wide linkage meta-analysis aimed to map: (1) susceptibility loci shared by a broad spectrum of GGEs, and (2) seizure type-related genetic factors preferentially predisposing to either typical absence or myoclonic seizures, respectively. METHODS: Meta-analysis of three genome-wide linkage datasets was carried out in 379 GGE-multiplex families of European ancestry including 982 relatives with GGEs. To dissect out seizure type-related susceptibility genes, two family subgroups were stratified comprising 235 families with predominantly genetic absence epilepsies (GAEs) and 118 families with an aggregation of juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME). To map shared and seizure type-related susceptibility loci, both nonparametric loci (NPL) and parametric linkage analyses were performed for a broad trait model (GGEs) in the entire set of GGE-multiplex families and a narrow trait model (typical absence or myoclonic seizures) in the subgroups of JME and GAE families. KEY FINDINGS: For the entire set of 379 GGE-multiplex families, linkage analysis revealed six loci achieving suggestive evidence for linkage at 1p36.22, 3p14.2, 5q34, 13q12.12, 13q31.3, and 19q13.42. The linkage finding at 5q34 was consistently supported by both NPL and parametric linkage results across all three family groups. A genome-wide significant nonparametric logarithm of odds score of 3.43 was obtained at 2q34 in 118 JME families. Significant parametric linkage to 13q31.3 was found in 235 GAE families assuming recessive inheritance (heterogeneity logarithm of odds = 5.02). SIGNIFICANCE: Our linkage results support an oligogenic predisposition of familial GGE syndromes. The genetic risk factor at 5q34 confers risk to a broad spectrum of familial GGE syndromes, whereas susceptibility loci at 2q34 and 13q31.3 preferentially predispose to myoclonic seizures or absence seizures, respectively. Phenotype- genotype strategies applying narrow trait definitions in phenotypic homogeneous subgroups of families improve the prospects of disentangling the genetic basis of common familial GGE syndromes.
- Published
- 2012
24. Analysis of LGI1 promoter sequence, PDYN and GABBR1 polymorphisms in sporadic and familial lateral temporal lobe epilepsy
- Author
-
Umberto Aguglia, Erica Diani, Antonio Gambardella, Andrea Vettori, Arturo de Falco, Simona Binelli, Carlo Nobile, Giorgia Bovo, Stefania Bortoluzzi, Edoardo Ferlazzo, Roberto Michelucci, Carlo Di Bonaventura, Vito Sofia, Giuseppe Gobbi, Pasquale Striano, Gabriella Egeo, Salvatore Striano, Giangennaro Coppola, Oriano Mecarelli, Maurizio Elia, Francesca Bisulli, Anna Teresa Giallonardo, Paolo Tinuper, Amedeo Bianchi, Bovo G., Diani E., Bisulli F., Di Bonaventura C., Striano P., Gambardella A., Ferlazzo E., Egeo G., Mecarelli O., Elia M., Bianchi A., Bortoluzzi S., Vettori A., Aguglia U., Binelli S., De Falco A., Coppola G., Gobbi G., Sofia V., Striano S., Tinuper P., Giallonardo A.T., Michelucci R., Nobile C., Bovo, G, Diani, E, Bisulli, F, Di Bonaventura, C, Striano, Pasquale, Gambardella, A, Ferlazzo, E, Egeo, G, Mecarelli, O, Elia, M, Bianchi, A, Bortoluzzi, S, Vettori, A, Aguglia, U, Binelli, S, De Falco, A, Coppola, G, Gobbi, G, Sofia, V, Striano, Salvatore, Tinuper, P, Giallonardo, At, Michelucci, R, Nobile, C., G., Bovo, E., Diani, F., Bisulli, C. D., Bonaventura, P., Striano, A., Gambardella, E., Ferlazzo, G., Egeo, O., Mecarelli, M., Elia, A., Bianchi, S., Bortoluzzi, A., Vettori, U., Aguglia, S., Binelli, A. D., Falco, G., Coppola, G., Gobbi, V., Sofia, P., Tinuper, A. T., Giallonardo, R., Michelucci, and C., Nobile
- Subjects
Proband ,Lateral temporal epilepsy ,medicine.disease_cause ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Exon ,Epilepsy ,Polymorphism (computer science) ,Receptors ,genetics ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Genetics ,Prodynorphin gene ,Mutation ,LGI1 promoter ,General Neuroscience ,Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,Base Sequence, Enkephalins ,genetics, Epilepsy ,Temporal Lobe ,genetics, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Humans, Mutation, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide, Promoter Regions ,Genetic, Protein Precursors ,genetics, Proteins ,genetics, Receptors ,GABA-B ,Single Nucleotide ,Enkephalins ,GABBR1 ,Association study ,genetics, Protein ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Temporal lobe ,Promoter Regions ,Genetic ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Single Nucleotide, Promoter Region ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Polymorphism ,Protein Precursors ,Allele ,Genetic, Protein Precursor ,genetics, Receptor ,Base Sequence, Enkephalin ,Base Sequence ,Proteins ,medicine.disease ,Endocrinology ,Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe ,Receptors, GABA-B - Abstract
Autosomal dominant lateral temporal epilepsy (ADTLE) is a genetically transmitted epileptic syndrome characterized by focal seizures with predominant auditory symptoms likely originating from the lateral region of the temporal lobe. Mutations in coding region or exon splice sites of the leucine-rich, glioma-inactivated 1 (LGI1) gene account for about 50\% of ADLTE families. De novo LGI1 mutations of the same kind have also been found in about 2.5\% of non-familial cases with idiopathic partial epilepsy with auditory features (IPEAF). In both conditions, mutations in the LGI1 promoter region have not been reported. We sequenced the minimal promoter region of LGI1 in the probands of 16 ADLTE families and in 104 sporadic IPEAF patients and no mutations clearly linked to the disease were found. However, two polymorphisms, -500G>A and -507G>A, with potential functional implications were identified and analysed in the cohort of sporadic IPEAF patients but their frequencies did not differ from those found in a control population of similar age, gender and geographic origin. We also analysed in our study population the GABA(B) receptor 1 c.1465G>A and the prodynorphin promoter 68-bp repeat polymorphisms, previously associated with temporal lobe epilepsy. None of these polymorphisms showed a significant association with IPEAF, whereas a tendency towards association with the prodynorphin low expression (L) alleles was found in the small group of ADLTE index cases, in agreement with previous studies suggesting that this polymorphism is a susceptibility factor in familial forms of temporal lobe epilepsy.
- Published
- 2008
25. Autosomal dominant lateral temporal epilepsy: absence of mutations in ADAM22 and Kv1 channel genes encoding LGI1-associated proteins
- Author
-
Edoardo Ferlazzo, Salvatore Striano, Federica Pinardi, Amedeo Bianchi, Antonio Gambardella, Pasquale Striano, Simona Binelli, Giangennaro Coppola, Anna Teresa Giallonardo, Francesca Bisulli, Umberto Aguglia, Maurizio Elia, Carlo Nobile, Erica Diani, Valeria Vianello, Oriano Mecarelli, Gabriella Egeo, Barbara Castellotti, Paolo Tinuper, Carlo Di Bonaventura, Giorgia Bovo, Roberto Michelucci, Diani, E, Di Bonaventura, C, Mecarelli, O, Gambardella, A, Elia, M, Bovo, G, Bisulli, F, Pinardi, F, Binelli, S, Egeo, G, Castellotti, B, Striano, Pasquale, Striano, Salvatore, Bianchi, A, Ferlazzo, E, Vianello, V, Coppola, G, Aguglia, U, Tinuper, P, Giallonardo, At, Michelucci, R, Nobile, C., Diani E., Di Bonaventura C., Mecarelli O., Gambardella A., Elia M., Bovo G., Bisulli F., Pinardi F., Binelli S., Egeo G., Castellotti B., Striano P., Striano S., Bianchi A., Ferlazzo E., Vianello V., Coppola G., Aguglia U., Tinuper P., Giallonardo A.T., Michelucci R., and Nobile C.
- Subjects
Male ,Protein subunit ,Population ,DNA Mutational Analysis ,Nerve Tissue Proteins ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,ADAM Proteins ,genetics, DNA Mutational Analysis ,methods, Epilepsy ,Temporal Lobe ,genetics, Family Health, Female, Genetic Testing ,methods, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Nerve Tissue Proteins ,genetics, Polymorphism ,Restriction Fragment Length, Proteins ,genetics, Shaker Superfamily of Potassium Channels ,genetics ,methods ,Exon ,adam22 receptor ,association studies ,autosomal dominant lateral temporal epilepsy ,kv1 channel ,lgi1 ,Genetic ,Neurotransmitter receptor ,medicine ,Humans ,Genetic Testing ,Polymorphism ,Kv1 channel ,education ,Gene ,Autosomal dominant lateral temporal epilepsy ,Association studies ,Genetics ,Family Health ,Mutation ,education.field_of_study ,Epilepsy ,Genetic heterogeneity ,ADAM22 ,ADAM22 receptor ,Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,Proteins ,Middle Aged ,Restriction Fragment Length ,Neurology ,Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe ,Shaker Superfamily of Potassium Channels ,LGI1 ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length - Abstract
Mutations in the LGI1 gene are linked to autosomal dominant lateral temporal epilepsy (ADTLE) in about half of the families tested, suggesting that ADLTE is genetically heterogeneous. Recently, the Lgi1 protein has been found associated with different protein complexes and two distinct molecular mechanisms possibly underlying ADLTE have been hypothesized: the one recognizes Lgi1 as a novel subunit of the presynaptic Kv1 potassium channel implicated in the regulation of channel inactivation, the other suggests that Lgi1 acts as a ligand that selectively binds to the postsynaptic receptor ADAM22, thereby regulating the glutamate-AMPA neurotransmission. Both mechanisms imply that LGI1 mutations result in alteration of synaptic currents, though of different types. Since their protein products have been found associated with Lgi1, the Kv1 channel subunit genes KCNA1, KCNA4, and KCNAB1 and ADAM22 can be considered strong candidates for ADLTE. We sequenced their coding exons and flanking splice sites in the probands of 9 carefully ascertained ADLTE families negative for LGI1 mutations. We failed to detect any mutation segregating with the disease, but identified several previously unreported polymorphisms. An association study of four non-synonymous variants (three found in ADAM22, one in KCNA4) in a population of 104 non-familial lateral temporal epilepsy cases did not show any modification of susceptibility to this disorder. Altogether, our results suggest that neither ADAM22 nor any of the three Kv1 channel genes are major causative genes for ADLTE.
- Published
- 2007
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.