172 results on '"L. Tesio"'
Search Results
2. Crying spells triggered by thumb-index rubbing after thalamic stroke: a case report
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R, Bassani, C, Rosazza, L, Ghirardin, V, Caldiera, E, Banco, C, Casati, and L, Tesio
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body regions ,Fingers ,Male ,Stroke ,Thalamus ,Humans ,Case Report ,Crying ,Cerebrovascular disease ,Aged - Abstract
Background Pathologic crying, devoid of any emotional counterpart, is known to occur as a consequence of various brain stem, cortical hemispheric and cerebellar lesions or, quite exceptionally, of “dacrystic” epilepsy. The case reported here suggests that thalamic lesions may also cause crying spells, under the special circumstances described below. Case presentation After a mild left thalamic stroke a caucasian 77 years old man presented with crying spells with no emotional counterpart, triggered by thumb-index rubbing of his right hand. Only a modest sensation loss on right infra-orbital and nose-labial areas and the first three right fingers could be detected at clinical examination. The circumstances and processes leading to the crying spells were investigated, together with their neural substrate. Brain computerized tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) were conducted. Neurophysiologic studies included Video-Electroencephalography, Electromyography, motor and sensory Evoked potentials. Active thumb-index rubbing, passive fingertips stimulation and interaction of sensory-motor stimulation with cognitive/speech activities were tested under different paradigms. A treatment with pregabalin (75 mg twice a day) was attempted. CT and MRI showed a small ischemic infarct in the left ventral postero-lateral thalamus, while fMRI led to the expected findings, i.e. a bilateral activation of the hand motor representation during the crying-triggering right-hand finger rubbing activity. Sensory potentials evoked from stimulation of the right upper limb were the only abnormal neurophysiologic test. Crying spells could be invariably evoked by both real and imagined active finger rubbing, in either the left of right hemi-space. Rubbing by an examiner was ineffective. Immersion in water (18 °C) but not oiling of the fingertips prevented the symptom. Administration and discontinuation of pregabalin 75 mg daily could be associated with suppression and reappearance of the symptom, respectively. Conclusions In this patient loss of sensation seemed to generate crying spells rather than the more common allodynia. As a matter of speculation, both symptoms might represent responses to a sensory loss, but in this case the pathway might have been selectively affected providing inhibition from the lateral to the medial segment of the VPLT, which is linked to the anterior cingulate (limbic) cortex engaged in emotional behaviour. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13104-017-2425-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
- Published
- 2016
3. Observational case-control study of the prevalence of chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency in multiple sclerosis: results from the CoSMo study
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G. Comi, M. Battaglia, A. Bertolotto, M. D. Sette, A. Ghezzi, G. Malferrari, M. Salvetti, M. Sormani, L. Tesio, E. Stolz, P. Zaratin, G. Mancardi, A. CoSMo Collaborative Study group [, A. Protti, A. Ciuffoli, A. Bratina, A. Guccione, A. Deboni, B. Giometto, C. Finocchi, C. Baracchini, D. Maimone, D. Rossato, D. Centonze, D. Ciampanelli, E. Favaretto, E. Menci, E. Granieri, E. Sanzaro, F. Viaro, F. Bortolon, F. Iemolo, F. Patti, F. Tezzon, G. Costantino, G. L. Mancardi, G. Sette, G. M. Nuzzaco, L. Provinciali, L. Coppo, L. D. Maggio, L. Monti, L. Pascazio, L. Grimaldi, L. Motti, M. Mancini, M. Busso, M. Rovaris, M. Buccafusca, M. L. Zedde, M. R. Tola, M. Trojano, M. Spinelli, M. Stefanini, M. Cirrito, M. Ulivelli, N. Carraro, N. D. Rossi, P. Cavalla, P. Gallo, P. Lochner, P. Cecconi, R. Mantegazza, R. Gaeta, R. Bergamaschi, R. Capra, S. Cottone, S. Sanguigni, S. Stecchi, S. Grazioli, S. Tonello, V. B. Morra], LUGARESI, ALESSANDRA, Comi, G, Battaglia, Ma, Bertolotto, A, Del Sette, M, Ghezzi, A, Malferrari, G, Salvetti, M, Sormani, Mp, Tesio, L, Stolz, E, Zaratin, P, Mancardi, G, BRESCIA MORRA, Vincenzo, CoSMo COllaborative Study, Group, Giometto, B, G. Comi, M. Battaglia, A. Bertolotto, M. D. Sette, A. Ghezzi, G. Malferrari, M. Salvetti, M. Sormani, L. Tesio, E. Stolz, P. Zaratin, G. Mancardi, A. CoSMo Collaborative Study group [, Alessandra Lugaresi, A. Protti, A. Ciuffoli, A. Bratina, A. Guccione, A. Deboni, B. Giometto, C. Finocchi, C. Baracchini, D. Maimone, D. Rossato, D. Centonze, D. Ciampanelli, E. Favaretto, E. Menci, E. Granieri, E. Sanzaro, F. Viaro, F. Bortolon, F. Iemolo, F. Patti, F. Tezzon, G. Costantino, G. L. Mancardi, G. Sette, G. M. Nuzzaco, L. Provinciali, L. Coppo, L. D. Maggio, L. Monti, L. Pascazio, L. Grimaldi, L. Motti, M. Mancini, M. Busso, M. Rovari, M. Buccafusca, M. L. Zedde, M. R. Tola, M. Trojano, M. Spinelli, M. Stefanini, M. Cirrito, M. Ulivelli, N. Carraro, N. D. Rossi, P. Cavalla, P. Gallo, P. Lochner, P. Cecconi, R. Mantegazza, R. Gaeta, R. Bergamaschi, R. Capra, S. Cottone, S. Sanguigni, S. Stecchi, S. Grazioli, S. Tonello, V. B. Morra], Comi, Giancarlo, and CoSMo Collaborative Study, Group
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Adult, Brain ,blood supply, Case-Control Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Multiple Sclerosis ,complications/epidemiology, Prevalence, Spinal Cord ,blood supply, Venous Insufficiency ,complications/epidemiology ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Neurology ,Chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency ,multicentric study ,multiple sclerosis ,neurodegenerative disease ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,circulatory system ,sonography ,Chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency, Italy, circulatory system, multicentric study, multiple sclerosis, neurodegenerative disease, prevalence study, sonography ,business.industry ,Multiple sclerosis ,prevalence study ,Case-control study ,Brain ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,blood supply ,Surgery ,Spinal Cord ,Venous Insufficiency ,Italy ,Case-Control Studies ,multiple sclerosi ,Duplex sonography ,Female ,Observational study ,Settore MED/26 - Neurologia ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Abstract
Background: Chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency (CCSVI) has been proposed as a possible cause of multiple sclerosis (MS). Objectives: The CoSMo study evaluated the association between CCSVI and MS. Methods: The primary end-point of this multicentric, case-control study was to compare the prevalence of CCSVI between patients with MS, patients with other neurodegenerative diseases (ONDs) and healthy controls (HCs). Color-coded duplex sonography was performed by a sonologist and the images were sent to one of three central sonologists for a second reading. Agreement between local and central sonologists or, in case of disagreement, the predominant judgment among the three central readers, was required for a diagnosis of CCSVI. All readings, data collection and analysis were blinded. Results: The study involved 35 MS centers across Italy and included 1874 subjects aged 18–55. 1767 (94%) were evaluable: 1165 MS patients, 226 patients with ONDs and 376 HCs. CCSVI prevalence was 3.26%, 3.10% and 2.13% for the MS, OND and HC groups, respectively. No significant difference in CCSVI prevalence was found amongst the three cohorts (MS versus HC, OR = 1.55, 95%CI = 0.72–3.36, p = 0.30; OND versus HC, OR = 1.47, 95%CI = 0.53–4.11, p = 0.46; MS versus OND, OR = 1.05, 95%CI = 0.47–2.39, p = 0.99). High negative and low positive agreement was found between the local and centralized readers. Conclusions: CCSVI is not associated with MS.
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- 2013
4. [A group therapy assessment tool (GrETha-Q)]
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I, Giorgi, C, Sguazzin, P, Baiardi, A, Simone, and L, Tesio
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Male ,Psychometrics ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Psychotherapy, Group ,Humans ,Female ,Middle Aged - Abstract
This paper presents a questionnaire designed to assess the aspecific treatment efficacy and subjective perceived efficacy of group therapy. A preliminary version of the instrument was administered to a sample of 151 subjects undergoing group therapy. The psychometric properties of the instrument were evaluated by means of the Rasch model, and showed a good score range, good reproducibility and adequate coherence. The hierarchy of difficulty of the items remained stable among the respective categories of sex, age and professional level.
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- 2008
5. Functional assessment in rehabilitative medicine: principles and methods
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L, Tesio
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Disability Evaluation ,Psychometrics ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Decision Making ,Rehabilitation ,Humans ,Disabled Persons ,Physical Therapy Modalities - Abstract
In rehabilitative medicine, functional assessment means a decision process that results from the interaction between classifications (for example, diagnostic) and measures, and that aims to recognize, anticipate or modify the interaction between the disabled person and his environment. In this context, the measure is the intersection of a person along the conceptual gradient and continuum ''from less to more'' attributed to variability in the ''total person,'' such as independence, pain, cognitive capacity, or fatigability. The principal instrument is the additive questionnaire (functional scale). This consists of various items believed to represent a common variable. These kinds of variables are observable only partially across various aspects of the whole person, and are not completely predictable. Their measure, consequently, can only be derived from an estimated statistic. The additive questionnaire is the principal measurement instrument. Several items all representing the same variable receive scores whose sum is assumed to be proportional to the quantity of the underlying variable. For various reasons the sum of the scores does not represent a true linear and continuous measure like those seen in chemistry and physics. Recently developed methods, in particular Rasch analysis, can extract true measures from raw scores. Thanks to better measurement of variability in persons within rehabilitative medicine, functional assessment can become increasingly more valid and informative.
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- 2007
6. Falls in the elderly: the development of a risk questionnaire and posturographic findings
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D, Alpini, R, Kohen-Ratz, R, Braun, A, Burstin, L, Tesio, L, Pugnetti, L, Mendozzi, G, Sambataro, A, Cesarani, and D A, Giuliano
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Male ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Activities of Daily Living ,Posture ,Age Factors ,Humans ,Accidental Falls ,Female ,Postural Balance ,Risk Assessment ,Aged - Abstract
In elderly people, owing to a perturbation at several levels, including the motor, sensory and cognitive levels, a condition of dizziness and unsteadiness complicated by frequent falls often appears. In this article, we review the most recent information about clinical and instrumental tools available for preventing mobility-related accidents and report the results of a comparative study of postural control, carried out through tetraataxiometry (by Tetrax, Tel Aviv, Israel), in two samples of elderly women belonging to two different populations: 24 Italian women (11 reporting falls and 13 without falls) having a mean age of 73.1 years, and 37 Israeli women (12 with falls and 25 without falls) having a mean age of 72.5 years. The posturographic findings show that the falling subjects, to maintain postural control, are highly dependent on somatosensory inputs and have a weaker "systeme postural fin" (fine postural system), according to Gagey. They also show that an elderly subpopulation exists that, for unknown reasons, is immune to destabilization and falls.
- Published
- 2003
7. Short form of the Dizziness Handicap Inventory: construction and validation through Rasch analysis
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L, Tesio, D, Alpini, A, Cesarani, and L, Perucca
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Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Analysis of Variance ,Eye Movements ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,Dizziness ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Severity of Illness Index ,Affect ,Logistic Models ,Bias ,Head Movements ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Activities of Daily Living ,Humans ,Disabled Persons ,Female ,Postural Balance ,Aged - Abstract
A new item response scale is presented, which measures the severity of self-reported balance deficits. The scale, DHIsf, is a short form of the Dizziness Handicap Inventory. The scale was constructed and validated by Rasch analysis. Rasch analysis was applied to rescore or remove any items misfitting, redundant, or off-target, until an optimal instrument was obtained. The 25-item, 3-level Dizziness Handicap Inventory was, thus, reduced to the 13-item, 2-level DHIsf. The retained items explore the domains of eye/head movements, full body activities, and mood alterations. Data were collected from 55 outpatients (63 +/- 13 yr; 43 females) attending otoneurological rehabilitation referral at a general hospital because of complaints of dizziness or imbalance. They were fully independent in ambulation and showed no evidence of major neurological or orthopedic diseases. Objective tests included brain computed tomography, sovraaorctic Doppler sonography, craniocorpography, static posturography, and nystagmography. The findings were categorized as pathologic, borderline, or normal. At least one examination was borderline or abnormal in 42 patients. The DHIsf was well targeted on this sample, with a mean score of 5.7/13 (standard deviation, 2.8; median, 5; range, 1-13). The Rasch statistics showed that the 13 items evenly fitted a hierarchy of difficulty within a homogeneous construct. A moderate but significant variance explanation of DHIsf measures was provided by a two-way analysis of variance model, with craniocorpography and nystagmography as independent categorical variables (r2 = 0.15; P = 0.018). When the clinical tests were individually taken into account, their outcome (dichotomized as abnormal v borderline or normal) could not be predicted by either of the DHIsf measures or raw scores (logistic regression). The DHIsf compares favorably with the original Dizziness Handicap Inventory, shows some consistency with the instrumental findings, and provides original information on the severity of imbalance syndromes, as it is seen from the patient's perspective.
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- 1999
8. Length of stay of stroke rehabilitation inpatients: prediction through the functional independence measure
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F, Franchignoni, L, Tesio, M T, Martino, E, Benevolo, and M, Castagna
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Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Cerebrovascular Disorders ,Italy ,Activities of Daily Living ,Humans ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Length of Stay ,Middle Aged ,Severity of Illness Index ,Aged - Abstract
A model for prediction of length of stay (LOS, in days) of stroke rehabilitation inpatients was developed, based on patients' age (years) and function at admission (scored on the Functional Independence Measure, FIMSM). One hundred and twenty-nine cases, consecutively admitted to three free-standing rehabilitation centres in Italy, were analyzed. A multiple linear regression using forward stepwise selection procedure was adopted. Median admission and discharge scores were: 57 and 75 for the total FIM score, 29 and 48 for the 13-item motor FIM subscore, 29 and 30 for the 5-item cognitive FIM subscore (potential range: 18-126, 13-91, 5-35, respectively). Median LOS was 44 days (interquartile range 30-62). The logLOS predictive model included three FIM items ("toilet transfer", TTr; "social interaction"; "expression") and patient's age (R2 = 0.48). TTr alone explained 31.3% of the variance of logLOS. These results are consistent with previous American studies, showing that FIM scores at admission are strong predictors of patients' LOS, with the transfer items having the greatest predictive power.
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- 1999
9. Vasoactive hormones induce nitric oxide synthase mRNA expression and nitric oxide production in human endothelial cells and monocytes
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Marina Schena, Giulio Mengozzi, Paolo Mulatero, L. Tesio, Domenica Schiavone, Livio Chiandussi, and Franco Veglio
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Epinephrine ,Nitric Oxide Synthase Type III ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Dopamine ,Gene Expression ,Nitric Oxide Synthase Type II ,Nitric Oxide ,Monocytes ,Nitric oxide ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Vasoconstrictor Agents ,RNA, Messenger ,biology ,Endothelin-1 ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Monocyte ,Angiotensin II ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,Nitric oxide synthase ,Endothelial stem cell ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Cytokine ,chemistry ,Liver ,biology.protein ,Human umbilical vein endothelial cell ,Female ,Endothelium, Vascular ,Nitric Oxide Synthase - Abstract
Isoform-2 nitric oxide synthase (NOS-2) mRNA expression and nitric oxide (NO) production are induced in endothelial cells and monocytes by cytokines such as gammaIFN and LPS. We evaluated NOS-2 and isoform-3 NOS (NOS-3) mRNA expression and NO production in human monocytes and human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC), under basal conditions and after incubation with physiologic concentrations of vasoactive hormones. NOS mRNA expression was detected by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and NO production by electronic paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR). We showed that NOS-2 mRNA expression and NO production were induced by stimulation with epinephrine, dopamine, endothelin-1, and angiotensin II, both in monocytes and HUVEC. NOS-3 mRNA expression and NO production were detected under basal conditions in monocytes and HUVEC and were not modified by the presence of vasoactive hormones. Human endothelial cells and monocytes express the NOS-2 and NOS-3 mRNA and the inducible NOS-2 mRNA expression increases after vasoactive hormone stimulation.
- Published
- 1999
10. The functional assessment measure (FAM) in closed traumatic brain injury outpatients: a Rasch-based psychometric study
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L, Tesio and A, Cantagallo
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Adult ,Male ,Disability Evaluation ,Models, Statistical ,Adolescent ,Italy ,Psychometrics ,Brain Injuries ,Activities of Daily Living ,Humans ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,Aged - Abstract
The Functional Assessment Measure (FAM) has been proposed as a measure of disability in post-acute Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) outpatients. It is comprised of the 18 items of The Functional Independence Measure (FIMSM), scored in terms of dependence, and of 12 newly designed items, scored in terms of dependence (7 items) or performance (5 items). The FIMSM covers the domains of self-care, sphincter management, mobility, locomotion, communication and social cognition. The 12 new items explore the domains of community integration, emotional status, orientation, attention, reading/writing skills, swallowing and speech intelligibility. By addressing a set of problems quite specific for TBI outpatients the FAM was intended to raise the ceiling of the FIMSM and to allow a more precise estimate of their disability. These claims, however, were never supported in previous studies. We administered the FAM to 60 TBI outpatient, 2-88 months (median 16) from trauma. Rasch analysis (rating scale model) was adopted to test the psychometric properties of the scale. The FAM was reliable (Rasch item and person reliability 0.91 and 0.93, respectively). Two of the 12 FAM-specific items were severely misfitting with the general construct, and were deleted. Within the 28-item refined FAM scale, 4 new items and 2 FIMSM items still retained signs of misfit. The FAM was on average too easy. The most difficult item (a new one, Employability) did not attain the average ability of the subjects. Also, it was only slightly more difficult than than the most difficult FIMSM item (Memory). The FAM does not seem to improve the FIMSM as a far as TBI outpatients are to be assessed.
- Published
- 1998
11. [Parkinson syndrome induced by veralipride]
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F P, Franchignoni and L, Tesio
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Dopamine Antagonists ,Humans ,Female ,Menopause ,Middle Aged ,Parkinson Disease, Secondary ,Sulpiride - Abstract
Veralipride, an antidopaminergic drug commonly prescribed to counteract postmenopausal symptoms, may cause reversible parkinsonism. A 49-year-old healthy woman reported a 5 month history of progressive slowing of voluntary movements, postural changes, e.g. sit-to-stand manouevres, and gait. Clinical examination revealed moderate hypokinesia, hypomimia and plastic rigidity of the four limbs. Locomotor oscillations of the upper limbs were decreased. She had been taking 100 mg of veralipride daily to counteract postmenopausal symptoms (vasomotor flushes and irritability) for 17 months uninterruptedly. The drug was withdrawn. The patient's clinical picture fully normalized within 20 days. One year later she reported to be still asymptomatic. This seems to be a case of parkinsonism induced by veralipride, a drug known to cause other extrapiramidal signs such as bucco-facial or limb dyskinesia. To our knowledge, only one other such case has been published (a 77-year-old French woman who had been taking veralipride, prazepam and nicergolin). In both cases, the drug had been administered for longer and without intervals. In our patient the motor disturbances could not have been associated with either advanced age or interaction with concurrent medications. Therefore, this case is suspected for veralipride-associated parkinsonism. In conclusion, intoxication should be thought in case of parkinsonism arising in women taking this drug.
- Published
- 1995
12. Vinculin, talin, and integrins are localized at specific adhesion sites of malignant B lymphocytes
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Nicolette D'Urso, Pier Carlo Marchisio, Federico Caligaris-Cappio, G. Corbascio, Marina Schena, Luciana Bergui, L. Tesio, O Cremona, Marchisio P., C, Bergui, L, Corbascio, Gc, Cremona, Ottavio, D'Urso, N, Schena, M, Tesio, L, and Caligaris Cappio, F.
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Talin ,Integrins ,Podosome ,Integrin ,Immunology ,Muscle Proteins ,CD18 ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Cell Adhesion ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Cytoskeleton ,B-Lymphocytes ,Membrane Glycoproteins ,Adhesion ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Vinculin ,Cell biology ,Leukemia, Lymphoid ,Cytoskeletal Proteins ,Podosome assembly ,biology.protein ,Integrin, beta 6 - Abstract
The microanatomy of the dot-shaped, close-contact sites called podosomes and the mechanism of their formation have been investigated in vitro in the malignant lymphocytes of B chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL). In this paper the authors demonstrate that in B-CLL podosomes: (1) vinculin, talin, and beta 2 integrin (CD18) rings surround an F- actin core; (2) the beta 1 integrin is localized within the F-actin core; (3) the beta 3 integrin is not present. This distribution and organization of adhesion-related molecules appears to be unique to B- CLL lymphocytes, since it has not been observed in normal B cells. B- CLL adhesion and podosome formation are inhibited by the synthetic peptide GRGDSP that contains the Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) sequence.
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- 1988
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13. Cytoskeleton organization is aberrantly rearranged in the cells of B chronic lymphocytic leukemia and hairy cell leukemia
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L. Tesio, Franca Tousco, Luciana Bergui, Pier Carlo Marchisio, Federico Caligaris-Cappio, and G. Corbascio
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Cell type ,Cytoskeleton organization ,Podosome ,Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biology ,Microfilament ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Cell biology ,Leukemia ,medicine ,Hairy cell leukemia ,Intermediate filament ,Cytoskeleton - Abstract
The organization of actin-containing microfilaments and vimentin- containing intermediate filaments has been investigated in B chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL), hairy cell leukemia (HCL), and normal B cells cultured in vitro under basal conditions and after induction with 12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA). In uninduced B-CLL cells, F-actin was predominantly associated with dot-shaped structures scattered over the ventral membrane representing spotty close contact adhesion sites analogous to ““podosomes” described in other cell types. On TPA induction, podosomes became clustered in sharply defined areas sitting in the cell center beneath the nucleus. In some cells, long actin-containing protrusions appeared. In HCL cells, F-actin was associated with thin microvilli responsible for the “hairy” appearance; occasional cells showed scattered podosomes. On TPA induction, HCL cells sprouted long dendritic processes rich in submembraneous F-actin, which made intertwined networks. Therefore, in both B-CLL and HCL cells, adhesion structures were present and the capacity for adhesion in vitro was marked, which might explain some peculiar clinical features of the diseases. Adhesion structures and adhesive properties never appeared in normal B cells. These data further support the notion that B-CLL and HCL, although clinically different, may share common biological features and suggest that in these disorders, cytoskeleton modifications may represent a hallmark of transformation.
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- 1986
- Full Text
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14. Natchev's auto-traction for lumbago-sciatica: effectiveness in lumbar disc herniation
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L, Tesio, G, Luccarelli, and M, Fornari
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Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Lumbar Vertebrae ,Middle Aged ,Sciatica ,Traction ,Chronic Disease ,Humans ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Intervertebral Disc Displacement ,Myelography ,Aged ,Pain Measurement - Abstract
In Lind's auto-traction (LAT) for lumbago-sciatica, the patient provides traction force by pulling with the arms on a specially designed table, which also allows painless mobilization of the lumbar spine and passive traction. Two studies reported that one to 15 one-hour sessions on successive days might be sufficient to relieve pain in 25% to 90% of cases with verified lumbar disc herniation. Unfortunately, the technique imposes tiring manual efforts on the therapist and requires that the patient be transported by ambulance and confined to bed for a long time. These inconveniences were removed in a new version of the treatment proposed by Natchev. The effectiveness of Natchev's auto-traction (NAT) was evaluated in an open prospective trial on 77 patient with chronic lumbago-sciatica refractory to previous therapies, and herniation of one or more lumbar discs verified by computed tomography (CT) or myelography. Thirty-six of the 77 patients (47%) responded to the treatment in three to ten (median = 5) half-hour sessions. Pain intensity dropped to 27% (median) of the pretreatment intensity. Six months after treatment, 28 of the 36 responders were stable; only four had undergone surgery. By contrast, 20 of the 41 nonresponders had been operated on. The severity of either the radiologic or the neurologic picture was not predictive of the outcome. NAT was as effective as LAT: thus, due to its greater convenience it appears to be suitable as a routine approach in lumbar disc herniation and as a screening technique before surgery.
- Published
- 1989
15. New trends in the biology of B-chronic lymphocytic leukemia
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F, Caligaris-Cappio, L, Bergui, and L, Tesio
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Chromosome Aberrations ,B-Lymphocytes ,Mice ,Antigens, Surface ,Phorbol Esters ,Animals ,Humans ,Chromosome Disorders ,Receptors, Interleukin-2 ,Oncogenes ,Receptors, Immunologic ,Cytoskeleton ,Leukemia, Lymphoid - Published
- 1986
16. Interrelationships of cell-substrate and cell-cell adhesion structures in B-chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL) cells
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F, Caligaris-Cappio, L, Bergui, L, Tesio, M, Riva, M, Schena, G, Corbascio, and P C, Marchisio
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Talin ,Integrins ,Membrane Glycoproteins ,Antigens, Differentiation ,Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell ,Actins ,Lymphocyte Function-Associated Antigen-1 ,Vinculin ,Cytoskeletal Proteins ,CD18 Antigens ,Cell Adhesion ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Humans ,Cytoskeleton - Published
- 1988
17. Phorbol ester induces abnormal chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells to express features of hairy cell leukemia
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Federico Caligaris-Cappio, Fabio Malavasi, G. Semenzato, Marco Chilosi, L. Tesio, R Schwarting, Giovanni Pizzolo, Luciana Bergui, L Morittu, and Marco Gobbi
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Embryonal Carcinoma Stem Cells ,medicine.drug_class ,Chronic lymphocytic leukemia ,Immunology ,Acid Phosphatase ,Bone Marrow Cells ,Monoclonal antibody ,Lymphocyte Activation ,Biochemistry ,Internal medicine ,Phorbol Esters ,medicine ,Humans ,Hairy cell leukemia ,CLL ,HCL ,phorbol ester ,B cell ,Cells, Cultured ,Tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase ,Aged ,B-Lymphocytes ,Leukemia, Hairy Cell ,Chemistry ,Pokeweed mitogen ,Mantle zone ,Germinal center ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Molecular biology ,Leukemia, Lymphoid ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neoplastic Stem Cells ,Mitogens - Abstract
We have investigated the relationship between chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), hairy cell leukemia (HCL), and different normal B cell subsets: Mrbc+, T1+ and slgM+ tonsil cells; germinal center; mantle zone; and peripheral blood B lymphocytes. Both malignant and normal cells were incubated in vitro with the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoyl- phorbol-13-acetate (TPA) for 72 hours and the morphology, cytochemical profile, and surface markers were evaluated. The results show that CLL cells TPA-induced become indistinguishable from HCL by four independent criteria: the morphology; the cytoplasmic tartrate resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) enzyme activity; the membrane positivity with anti- Leu M5 (SHCL3); and anti-Tac monoclonal antibodies which, in the uninduced state, react only with HCL. The features of TRAP and Tac positivity are also expressed (though in variable degree) by different normal B cell populations activated with TPA or pokeweed mitogen (PWM). It is concluded that HCL might represent an aberrantly activated variant of CLL (or of a CLL-related disorder).
- Published
- 1985
18. Interrelationships of Cell-Substrate and Cell-Cell Adhesion Structures in B-Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (B-CLL) Cells
- Author
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Marina Schena, L. Tesio, M. Riva, Pier Carlo Marchisio, Federico Caligaris-Cappio, G. Corbascio, and Luciana Bergui
- Subjects
Podosome ,biology ,Chemistry ,Integrin ,Adhesion ,Vinculin ,medicine.disease ,Cell biology ,Leukemia ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Lymphocyte function-associated antigen 1 ,Bone marrow ,Cell adhesion - Abstract
The investigation of cell-substrate adhesion structures and cell-cell interaction molecules may be crucial to understanding the traffic and distribution of malignant lymphoid cells. In this Vespect, B-chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL) is a useful model because of three reasons. First, malignant B-CLL cells relentlessly accumulate in lymphoid organs and the bone marrow, but fail, in large part, to recirculate (1), suggesting the existence of adhesion abnormalities. Second, the cytoskeletal organization of B-CLL cells differs from that of normal B lymphocytes (2). B-CLL cells adhere spontaneously in vitro utilizing, instead of the conventional “adhesion plaques”, dot-shaped close contact sites similar to the podosomes described in cells of monocyte-macrophage lineage and in class I oncogene-transformed cells (3–5). Third, the cytoskeleton function of B-CLL cells may be abnormal as suggested by the observation that different ligands, including surface immunoglobulins (slg), are capped sluggishly if at all (6,7).
- Published
- 1988
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19. Speed-dependent variations of lower-limb joint angles during walking. A graphic computerized method showing individual patterns
- Author
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C, Frigo and L, Tesio
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Leg ,Knee Joint ,Movement ,Artificial Limbs ,Middle Aged ,Amputees ,Humans ,Female ,Hip Joint ,Gait ,Ankle Joint ,Locomotion - Abstract
A method for obtaining a synthetic representation of the joint angle time-courses at different walking velocities is presented, based on a computerized procedure. Hip, knee and ankle joint angles are measured by electrogoniometric devices and checked on line for their reliability. One stride only for each walking speed is selected as representative of the adopted cadence. For each joint a tridimensional representation of angle time-course versus stride frequency or versus gait speed is performed so that speed-dependent variations can be analyzed. Ten normal (seven males and three females) and three prosthetized subjects have been tested by this method. In normal as well as in pathological subjects individual features could be easily detected and the method proved to be useful for a functional gait evaluation.
- Published
- 1986
20. Cytoskeleton organization is aberrantly rearranged in the cells of B chronic lymphocytic leukemia and hairy cell leukemia
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F, Caligaris-Cappio, L, Bergui, L, Tesio, G, Corbascio, F, Tousco, and P C, Marchisio
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Male ,Actin Cytoskeleton ,B-Lymphocytes ,Leukemia, Hairy Cell ,Intermediate Filaments ,Humans ,Immunoglobulins ,Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate ,Vimentin ,Middle Aged ,Cytoskeleton ,Aged ,Leukemia, Lymphoid - Abstract
The organization of actin-containing microfilaments and vimentin-containing intermediate filaments has been investigated in B chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL), hairy cell leukemia (HCL), and normal B cells cultured in vitro under basal conditions and after induction with 12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA). In uninduced B-CLL cells, F-actin was predominantly associated with dot-shaped structures scattered over the ventral membrane representing spotty close contact adhesion sites analogous to "podosomes" described in other cell types. On TPA induction, podosomes became clustered in sharply defined areas sitting in the cell center beneath the nucleus. In some cells, long actin-containing protrusions appeared. In HCL cells, F-actin was associated with thin microvilli responsible for the "hairy" appearance; occasional cells showed scattered podosomes. On TPA induction, HCL cells sprouted long dendritic processes rich in submembraneous F-actin, which made intertwined networks. Therefore, in both B-CLL and HCL cells, adhesion structures were present and the capacity for adhesion in vitro was marked, which might explain some peculiar clinical features of the diseases. Adhesion structures and adhesive properties never appeared in normal B cells. These data further support the notion that B-CLL and HCL, although clinically different, may share common biological features and suggest that in these disorders, cytoskeleton modifications may represent a hallmark of transformation.
- Published
- 1986
21. The Origin of B-Chronic Lymphocytic Leukaemia (B-CLL) and its Relationship to Hairy Cell Leukaemia (HCL)
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Federico Caligaris-Cappio, Fabio Malavasi, D. Campana, Luciana Bergui, L. Tesio, Marco Chilosi, Giovanni Pizzolo, Gianpietro Semenzato, and Marco Gobbi
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Interleukin 2 ,Chemistry ,medicine.drug_class ,Chronic lymphocytic leukemia ,medicine.disease ,Monoclonal antibody ,Molecular biology ,Leukemia ,Immunophenotyping ,Antigen ,Monoclonal ,medicine ,Hairy Cell ,medicine.drug - Abstract
B-CLL is the prototype of B-cell chronic lymphoid leukaemias. The malignant cells have well defined features such as weak surface immunoglobulins (sIg), rosetting ability with Mouse red blood cells (Mrbc) and expression of the T-cell associated antigen TI (reviewed in ref. 1). HCL is an enigmatic disorder classified, in its typical form, among chronic B-cell malignancies. The leukaemic cells express monoclonal sIg 2,3 and exhibit the appropriate Ig gene rearrangement 4. Unique to HCL is the concomitant presence of four major characters: a) typical membrane irregularities with veils and microprocesses 5,6; b) strong cytoplasmic tartrate resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) activity 5,6; c) positivity with the monoclonal antibody (Mc7Ab) SHCL3 which is negative on non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas and B-CLL 7; d) membrane reactivity with the Mc Ab anti-Tac 4,8 which detects the receptor for Interleukin 2 (IL 2; ref. 9).
- Published
- 1985
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22. Motion of the center of gravity of the body in clinical evaluation of gait
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L, Tesio, P, Civaschi, and L, Tessari
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Male ,Osteoarthritis ,Biophysics ,Humans ,Female ,Hemiplegia ,Hip Joint ,Middle Aged ,Gait ,Biophysical Phenomena ,Aged ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Gravitation - Abstract
The motion of the center of gravity during walking was analyzed in five hemiplegic subjects and eleven subjects affected by unilateral hip arthritis. In the hemiplegic subjects and 6 subjects with hip arthritis the transfer between kinetic and potential energy (with a passive pendular motion) was found to be 9-95% greater during the step performed on the affected limb ("pathological" step); as a consequence, the muscular work done during this step was 7-81% of the work done during the step performed on the second limb ("normal" step). Qualitatively similar gait anomalies were recorded in all hemiplegic subjects with hypertonus of the paretic limb: these subjects had to lift the spastic limb as a whole during the normal step, with the consequence that the center of gravity was lifted 0.6-3 cm more than during the pathological step. In contrast, various motor patterns were found in patients with hip arthritis. During the pathological step the center of gravity reached a height 0.5-3 cm greater in 7 subjects, 1 cm smaller in one subject, and about the same height reached during the normal step in 3 subjects. This was consistent with the various motor deficits caused by hip arthritis.
- Published
- 1985
23. Membrane-Microfilament Interactions in the Cells of B-Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia
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Luciana Bergui, Fabio Malavasi, Pier Carlo Marchisio, L. Tesio, Felice Gavosto, G. Corbascio, and Federico Caligaris-Cappio
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CD20 ,biology ,Chemistry ,Lymphocyte ,Chronic lymphocytic leukemia ,medicine.disease ,Microfilament ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Hairy cell leukemia ,Receptor ,Cytoskeleton ,Lymphoid leukemia - Abstract
In the present study we have investigated the association between cell surface molecules and the cytoskeleton in malignant B-chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (B-CLL) cells. The rationale was the observation that close interactions between surface receptors and cytoskeletal proteins are involved in the regulation of several major lymphocyte functions, including activation and recirculation [1]. B-CLL cells were selected for this study for three reasons. First, B-CLL monoclonal B cells have a well-characterized phenotype [2]: they express on the membrane the monoclonal-antibody (MoAb)-defined cluster differentiation (CD) 19, 20, 21, 24 and 5 structures. Second, they have abnormalities that suggest defects of cytoskeleton function, such as the inability to cap surface immunoglobulins (sIg) and other ligand receptors [3].
- Published
- 1987
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24. Manual test for differential diagnosis between weakness of the trapezius and serratus anterior muscles
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L, Tesio
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Diagnosis, Differential ,Scapula ,Movement ,Muscles ,Humans ,Muscle Contraction - Published
- 1989
25. Identification of malignant plasma cell precursors in the bone marrow of multiple myeloma
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Luciana Bergui, G Janossy, Marco Chilosi, Fabio Malavasi, Dario Campana, Giovanni Pizzolo, B van Camp, Federico Caligaris-Cappio, and L. Tesio
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Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Plasma Cells ,myeloma ,plasma cell precursors ,immunophenotype ,Plasma cell ,Immunophenotyping ,Antigens, Neoplasm ,Bone Marrow ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Cells, Cultured ,B cell ,Aged ,Plasma cell leukemia ,biology ,Calla ,Cell Differentiation ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Hematopoietic Stem Cells ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular biology ,Antigens, Differentiation, B-Lymphocyte ,Phenotype ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase ,Antigens, Surface ,Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate ,Female ,Neprilysin ,Bone marrow ,CD5 ,Multiple Myeloma ,Research Article - Abstract
Precursors of plasma cells were studied in the bone marrow of 28 patients with multiple myeloma, plasma cell leukemia, and benign monoclonal gammopathy. Pre-B and B cell populations were analyzed with anti-B monoclonal antibodies corresponding to the clusters standardized at the Leucocyte Typing Workshops in Paris and Boston (CD9, CD10, CD19-22, CD24). In advanced forms of plasma cell malignancies, such as cases of multiple myeloma in stages II and III and of plasma cell leukemia, some cells of lymphoid morphology expressed common acute lymphoblastic leukemia antigen (CALLA, CD10) and HLA-DR, but contained no detectable terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase enzyme. These CALLA+ cells were absent in benign monoclonal gammopathies. In multiple myeloma, the CALLA+ cells were negative for surface and cytoplasmic immunoglobulins (Ig), and, unlike CALLA+, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT+) pre-B cells in the normal bone marrow also failed to react with antibodies to B cell-associated antigens such as CD9, CD19, CD22, and CD24. The CALLA+, Ig- cells could be regarded as preplasmacytic since, after having been separated and stimulated with the phorbol ester 12-0-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13 acetate in vitro, they transformed into plasma cells and synthesized the same heavy and light chains as myeloma cells.
- Published
- 1985
26. A possible pathogenetic role of cationic proteins (CP) released by stored granulocytes in the development of pulmonary infiltrates after granulocyte transfusions
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Federico Caligaris-Cappio, C. Tetta, D. Campana, Luciana Bergui, Giovanni Camussi, P. Vallauri, and L. Tesio
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Adult ,Male ,Time Factors ,cationic protein ,Neutrophils ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Biology ,Granulocyte ,Polymorphonuclear Neutrophils ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,New zealand white ,Lung ,Immune Sera ,polymorphonuclear neutrophils ,Transfusion Reaction ,hemic and immune systems ,Blood Proteins ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,In vitro ,Microvascular Bed ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Blood Preservation ,Immunology ,Female ,Pulmonary infiltrates ,Rabbits ,Intracellular ,Antimicrobial Cationic Peptides - Abstract
The cationic protein (CP) content of polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN) prepared for transfusion is depleted after storage. The supernatants from these PMN have in vitro a PMN aggregating activity which is abolished by the preabsorption with a specific rabbit anti-human PMN CP serum. Furthermore, when the supernatants stored for few hours were injected into New Zealand White rabbits, a marked sequestration of PMN took place in the lung microvascular bed. It is suggested that PMN storage per se can cause the release of intracellular mediators of possible pathogenetic importance in the development of the pulmonary infiltrates observed after PMN transfusions.
27. Human normal CD5+ B lymphocytes can be induced to differentiate to CD5- B lymphocytes with germinal center cell features
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Luciana Bergui, Marina Schena, L. Tesio, M. Riva, Federico Caligaris-Cappio, and Gianluca Gaidano
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Lymphoid Tissue ,Immunology ,Naive B cell ,Transferrin receptor ,CD38 ,Biology ,CD5 Antigens ,Lymphocyte Activation ,Biochemistry ,Antigen ,immune system diseases ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Animals ,Humans ,IL-2 receptor ,Growth Substances ,B-Lymphocytes ,Stem Cells ,CD23 ,Germinal center ,hemic and immune systems ,Cell Differentiation ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Fetal Blood ,Antigens, Differentiation ,Cell biology ,Phenotype ,Rabbits ,CD5 - Abstract
A significant proportion of cord blood CD5+ B cells express the activation molecules CD23, CD25, and transferrin receptor; react with the cell-cycle-associated monoclonal antibody (MoAb) Ki67; can be induced to enter the S phase of cell cycle by interleukin-2 (IL-2), IL- 4, or low-molecular-weight B-cell growth factor (Imw-BCGF) and, exposed to IL-1 and IL-2, acquire the features (sIgD-, CD5-, CD10+, CD38+) of B blasts proliferating in the germinal centers of secondary follicles. These findings indicate that CD5+ B cells are preactivated and, in the proper microenvironment, may give rise to CD5- B cells.
28. Rehabilitation of post-stroke aphasia by a single protocol targeting phonological, lexical, and semantic deficits with speech output tasks: a randomized controlled trial.
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Banco E, Diana L, Casati C, Tesio L, Vallar G, and Bolognini N
- Abstract
Background: The defective spoken output of persons with aphasia has anomia as a main clinical manifestation. Improving anomia is therefore a main goal of any language treatment., Aim: This study assessed the effectiveness of a novel, 2-week, rehabilitation protocol (PHOLEXSEM), focused on PHonological, SEmantic, and LExical deficits, aiming at improving lexical retrieval, and, generally, spoken output., Design: A prospective, randomized controlled trial., Setting: In-patient and out-patient population of the Neurorehabilitation Unit of the Istituto Auxologico Italiano IRCCS, Milan, Italy., Population: The sample comprised 44 adults with aphasia due to left brain damage; 22 of them were assigned to the experimental (PHOLEXSEM) group, whereas 22 were assigned to the control group that received the Promoting Aphasics Communicative Effectiveness (PACE) protocol., Methods: All participants were treated 30-min daily for two weeks. The PHOLEXSEM training included 3 sets of exercises: 1) non-word, word, and phrase repetition; 2) semantic feature analysis by naming; 3) phonemic, semantic, and verb recall. Treatment effects were evaluated with tasks and items different from those used for training, to assess generalization effects., Results: After the PHOLEXSEM treatment, repetition, naming, lexical retrieval and sentence comprehension improved more than in the control - PACE - group, with gains generalizing to non-trained items. These improvements were independent of aphasia chronicity and only marginally influenced by demographic factors., Conclusions: The 2-week PHOLEXSEM training, by targeting spoken output, ameliorates different aspects of aphasia, ranging from speech production (i.e., phonology and lexical retrieval) to comprehension., Clinical Rehabilitation Impact: The PHOLEXSEM training is a useful and easy-to-administer intervention to improve post-stroke language deficits in adults of different ages, levels of education, duration, type, and severity of aphasia.
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- 2024
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29. Visual self-face and self-body recognition in a left-brain-damaged prosopagnosic patient.
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Casati C, Diana L, Casartelli S, Tesio L, Vallar G, and Bolognini N
- Abstract
The present case study describes the patient N.G., who reported prosopagnosia along with difficulty in recognising herself in the mirror following a left-sided temporo-occipital hemispheric stroke. The neuropsychological and experimental investigation revealed only a mild form of apperceptive prosopagnosia, without visual agnosia, primarily caused by an impaired visual processing of face-parts and body parts but not of full faces. Emotional expressions did not modulate her face processing. On the other hand, N.G. showed a marked impairment of visual self-recognition, as assessed with visual matching-to-sample tasks, both at the level of body-part and face-part processing and at a full-face level, featured by a deficit in the perceptual discrimination of her own face and body, as compared to the others' face and body. N.G.'s lesion mapping showed damage to the left inferior occipito-temporal cortex, affecting the inferior occipital gyrus and compromising long-range connections between the occipital/temporo-occipital areas and the anterior fronto-temporal areas. Overall, the present case report documents that visual processing of the person's own face may be selectively compromised by a left-sided hemispheric lesion disconnecting extra-striate body- and face-selective visual areas to self-representation regions. Moreover, others' (full) face processing may be preserved, as compared with the impaired ability to discriminate others' body and face parts., (© 2024 The British Psychological Society.)
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- 2024
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30. A multi-center international study on the spinal cord independence measure, version IV: Rasch psychometric validation.
- Author
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Catz A, Itzkovich M, Rozenblum R, Elkayam K, Kfir A, Tesio L, Chhabra HS, Michaeli D, Zeilig G, Engel-Haber E, Bizzarini E, Pilati C, Stigliano S, Merafina M, Del Popolo G, Righi G, Bonavita J, Baroncini I, Liu N, Xing H, Margalho P, Campos I, Riberto M, Soeira TP, Chandy B, Tharion G, Joshi M, Lemay JF, Laramée MT, Curran D, Leiulfsrud AS, Sørensen L, Biering-Sorensen F, Poder HH, Kesiktas N, Burgess-Collins L, Edwards J, Osman A, and Bluvshtein V
- Subjects
- Humans, Middle Aged, Adult, Female, Male, Aged, Adolescent, Aged, 80 and over, Disability Evaluation, Reproducibility of Results, Young Adult, Psychometrics standards, Psychometrics methods, Spinal Cord Injuries rehabilitation, Spinal Cord Injuries psychology
- Abstract
Context: The Spinal Cord Independence Measure is a comprehensive functional rating scale for individuals with spinal cord lesion (SCL)., Objective: To validate the scores of the three subscales of SCIM IV, the fourth version of SCIM, using advanced statistical methods., Study Design: Multi-center cohort study., Setting: Nineteen SCL units in 11 countries., Methods: SCIM developers created SCIM IV following comments by experts, included more accurate definitions of scoring criteria in the SCIM IV form, and adjusted it to assess specific conditions or situations that the third version, SCIM III, does not address. Professional staff members assessed 648 SCL inpatients, using SCIM IV and SCIM III, at admission to rehabilitation, and at discharge. The authors examined the validity and reliability of SCIM IV subscale scores using Rasch analysis., Results: The study included inpatients aged 16-87 years old. SCIM IV subscale scores fit the Rasch model. All item infit and most item outfit mean-square indices were below 1.4; statistically distinct strata of abilities were 2.6-6; most categories were properly ordered; item hierarchy was stable across most clinical subgroups and countries. In a few items, however, we found misfit or category threshold disordering. We found SCIM III and SCIM IV Rasch properties to be comparable., Conclusions: Rasch analysis suggests that the scores of each SCIM IV subscale are reliable and valid. This reinforces the justification for using SCIM IV in clinical practice and research.
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- 2024
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31. In Myotonic Dystrophy Type 1 Head Repositioning Errors Suggest Impaired Cervical Proprioception.
- Author
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Scarano S, Caronni A, Carraro E, Ferrari Aggradi CR, Rota V, Malloggi C, Tesio L, and Sansone VA
- Abstract
Background: Myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) is a rare multisystemic genetic disorder with motor hallmarks of myotonia, muscle weakness and wasting. DM1 patients have an increased risk of falling of multifactorial origin, and proprioceptive and vestibular deficits can contribute to this risk. Abnormalities of muscle spindles in DM1 have been known for years. This observational cross-sectional study was based on the hypothesis of impaired cervical proprioception caused by alterations in the neck spindles. Methods: Head position sense was measured in 16 DM1 patients and 16 age- and gender-matched controls. A head-to-target repositioning test was requested from blindfolded participants. Their head was passively rotated approximately 30° leftward or rightward and flexed or extended approximately 25°. Participants had to replicate the imposed positions. An optoelectronic system was adopted to measure the angular differences between the reproduced and the imposed positions (joint position error, JPE, °) concerning the intended (sagittal, horizontal) and unintended (including the frontal) planar projections. In DM1 patients, JPEs were correlated with clinical and balance measures. Static balance in DM1 patients was assessed through dynamic posturography. Results: The accuracy and precision of head repositioning in the intended sagittal and horizontal error components did not differ between DM1 and controls. On the contrary, DM1 patients showed unintended side-bending to the left and the right: the mean [95%CI] of frontal JPE was -1.29° [-1.99°, -0.60°] for left rotation and 0.98° [0.28°, 1.67°] for right rotation. The frontal JPE of controls did not differ significantly from 0° (left rotation: 0.17° [-0.53°, 0.87°]; right rotation: -0.22° [-0.91°, 0.48°]). Frontal JPE differed between left and right rotation trials ( p < 0.001) only in DM1 patients. No correlation was found between JPEs and measures from dynamic posturography and clinical scales. Conclusions: Lateral head bending associated with head rotation may reflect a latent impairment of neck proprioception in DM1 patients.
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- 2024
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32. Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine: say relational or functional, not holistic.
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Tesio L, Scarano S, and Caronni A
- Subjects
- Humans, Persons with Disabilities, Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine
- Abstract
Modern medicine tends to privilege disciplines promising "objective" laws governing body parts (from molecules to organs). Studies on a person's illness and disability are (apparently) confined to "subjectivity." The Specialty of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine is often regarded as a humanitarian approach, belonging at best to the family of "soft," "qualitative," or "quasi-experimental" sciences. This specialty often claims specificity by labelling itself as "functional" and "holistic." However, it is shown here that the former term is acceptable, yet redundant, and the second misleading. When human behaviors and perceptions are at stake, "function" indicates a person's relationship with the outer world (already tackled by the definitional term "physical" from the Greek "physis"). The word "holistic" emphasizes mind-body unity and person-environment interdependence but, in current usage, overshadows the complementary need for an analytic, experimental approach to any function. Medicine aims at fighting disease and disability in single persons. This endeavor requires knowing body parts and mechanisms and understanding how interventions on "parts" affect the "whole." This understanding rests on the experimental method. For instance, returning to a given societal role (participation) may require restoration of walking (activity), which may require reinforcement of weakened muscular groups (impairment). Working only on holistic bio-psycho-social "wholes" may miss the therapeutic mission of medicine.
- Published
- 2024
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33. Interpreting results from Rasch analysis 1. The "most likely" measures coming from the model.
- Author
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Tesio L, Caronni A, Kumbhare D, and Scarano S
- Subjects
- Humans, Fatigue diagnosis, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, Pain, Physical Examination
- Abstract
Purpose: The present article summarises the characteristics of Rasch's theory, providing an original metrological model for persons' measurements. Properties describing the person "as a whole" are key outcome variables in Medicine. This is particularly true in Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine, targeting the person's interaction with the outer world. Such variables include independence, pain, fatigue, balance, and the like. These variables can only be observed through behaviours of various complexity, deemed representative of a given "latent" person's property. So how to infer its "quantity"? Usually, behaviours (items) are scored ordinally, and their "raw" scores are summed across item lists (questionnaires). The limits and flaws of scores (i.e., multidimensionality, non-linearity) are well known, yet they still dominate the measurement in Medicine. Conclusions: Through Rasch's theory and statistical analysis, scores are transformed and tested for their capacity to respect fundamental measurement axioms. Rasch analysis returns the linear measure of the person's property ("ability") and the item's calibrations ("difficulty"), concealed by the raw scores. The difference between a person's ability and item difficulty determines the probability that a "pass" response is observed. The discrepancy between observed scores and the ideal measures (i.e., the residual) invites diagnostic reasoning. In a companion article, advanced applications of Rasch modelling are illustrated. Implications for rehabilitationQuestionnaires' ordinal scores are poor approximations of measures. The Rasch analysis turns questionnaires' scores into interval measures, provided that its assumptions are respected.Thanks to the Rasch analysis, accurate measures of independence, pain, fatigue, cognitive capacities and other whole person's variables of paramount importance in rehabilitation are available.The current work is addressed to rehabilitation professionals looking for an introduction to interpreting published results based on Rasch analysis.The first of a series of two, the present article illustrates the most common graphic and numeric outputs found in published papers presenting the Rasch analysis of questionnaires.
- Published
- 2024
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34. Interpreting results from Rasch analysis 2. Advanced model applications and the data-model fit assessment.
- Author
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Tesio L, Caronni A, Simone A, Kumbhare D, and Scarano S
- Subjects
- Humans, Psychometrics, Surveys and Questionnaires, Research Design, Reproducibility of Results, Physical Examination, Attitude
- Abstract
Purpose: The present paper presents developments and advanced practical applications of Rasch's theory and statistical analysis to construct questionnaires for measuring a person's traits. The flaws of questionnaires providing raw scores are well known. Scores only approximate objective, linear measures. The Rasch Analysis allows you to turn raw scores into measures with an error estimate, satisfying fundamental measurement axioms (e.g., unidimensionality, linearity, generalizability). A previous companion article illustrated the most frequent graphic and numeric representations of results obtained through Rasch Analysis. A more advanced description of the method is presented here. Conclusions: Measures obtained through Rasch Analysis may foster the advancement of the scientific assessment of behaviours, perceptions, skills, attitudes, and knowledge so frequently faced in Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine, not less than in social and educational sciences. Furthermore, suggestions are given on interpreting and managing the inevitable discrepancies between observed scores and ideal measures (data-model "misfit"). Finally, twelve practical take-home messages for appraising published results are provided.Implications for rehabilitationThe current work is the second of two papers addressed to rehabilitation clinicians looking for an in-depth introduction to the Rasch analysis.The first paper illustrates the most common results reported in published papers presenting the Rasch analysis of questionnaires.The present article illustrates more advanced applications of the Rasch analysis, also frequently found in publications.Twelve take-home messages are given for a critical appraisal of the results.
- Published
- 2024
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35. Reversed Mirror Therapy (REMIT) after Stroke-A Proof-of-Concept Study.
- Author
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Tesio L, Caronni A, Russo C, Felisari G, Banco E, Simone A, Scarano S, and Bolognini N
- Abstract
In mirror training (MIT), stroke patients strive to move their hands while looking at the reflected image of the unaffected one. The recruitment of the mirror neurons and visual-proprioceptive conflict are expected to facilitate the paretic voluntary movement. Here, a reversed MIT (REMIT) is presented, which requires moving hands while looking at the reflected image of the paretic one, giving the illusion of being unable to move the unimpaired hand. This study compares MIT and REMIT on post-stroke upper-limb recovery to gain clues on the mechanism of action of mirror therapies. Eight chronic stroke patients underwent two weeks of MIT and REMIT (five sessions each) in a crossover design. Upper-limb Fugl-Meyer, Box and Block and handgrip strength tests were administered at baseline and treatments end. The strength of the mirror illusion was evaluated after each session. MIT induced a larger illusory effect. The Fugl-Meyer score improved to the same extent after both treatments. No changes occurred in the Box and Block and the handgrip tests. REMIT and MIT were equally effective on upper-limb dexterity, challenging the exclusive role of mirror neurons. Contrasting learned nonuse through an intersensory conflict might provide the rationale for both forms of mirror-based rehabilitation after stroke.
- Published
- 2023
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36. Validation of "Neurit.Space": Three Digital Tests for the Neuropsychological Evaluation of Unilateral Spatial Neglect.
- Author
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Massetti G, Albini F, Casati C, Toneatto C, Terruzzi S, Etzi R, Tesio L, Gallace A, and Vallar G
- Abstract
Patients suffering from Unilateral Spatial Neglect (USN) fail to pay attention to, respond to, and report sensory events occurring in the contralesional side of space. The traditional neuropsychological assessment of USN is based on paper-and-pencil tests, whose data recording and scoring may be subjected to human error. The utilization of technological devices can be expected to improve the assessment of USN. Therefore, we built Neurit.Space, a modified digital version of three paper-and-pencil tests, widely used to detect signs of USN, namely: Bells Cancellation, Line Bisection and Five Elements Drawing Test. Administration and data processing is fully automatic. Twelve right brain-damaged patients (six with and six without USN) and 12 age- and education-balanced healthy participants were enrolled in the study. All participants were administered both the computerized and the paper-and-pencil versions of the tests. The results of this preliminary study showed good sensitivity, specificity, and usability of Neurit.Space, suggesting that these digital tests are a promising tool for the evaluation of USN, both in clinical and in research settings.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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37. Cervical Proprioception Assessed through Targeted Head Repositioning: Validation of a Clinical Test Based on Optoelectronic Measures.
- Author
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Cerina V, Tesio L, Malloggi C, Rota V, Caronni A, and Scarano S
- Abstract
Neck proprioception is commonly assessed with head repositioning tests. In such a test, an operator rotates the head of a blindfolded individual to a target position. After returning to the rest position, the participant actively repositions the head to the target. Joint Position Error (JPE) is the angular difference between the target angle (however oriented in a 3D space) and the actively reached positions (the smaller the difference, the better the proprioception). This study aimed to validate a head-to-target (HTT) repositioning test using an optoelectronic system for also measuring the components of the JPE in the horizontal, frontal, and sagittal planes. The head movements requested by the operator consisted of 30° left-right rotations and 25° flexion-extension. The operators or subjects could not obtain these movements without modest rotations in other planes. Two operators were involved. Twenty-six healthy participants (13 women) were recruited (mean (SD): 33.4 (6.3) years). The subjects' JPE in the requested (intended) plane of motion (JPE int-component ) was a few degrees only and smaller for flexion-extensions than for left-right rotations (right rotation: 5.39° (5.29°); left rotation: 5.03° (4.51°), extension: 1.79° (3.94°); flexion: 0.54° (4.35°)). Participants' average error in unintended planes was around 1° or less. Inter-operator consistency and agreement were high. The smallest detectable change, at p < 0.05, for JPE int-component ranged between 4.5° and 6.98°. This method of optoelectronic measurement in HTT repositioning tests provides results with good metric properties, fostering application to clinical studies.
- Published
- 2023
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38. Determinants of age-related decline in walking speed in older women.
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Martins VF, Tesio L, Simone A, Gonçalves AK, and Peyré-Tartaruga LA
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- Humans, Female, Aged, Middle Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Aging physiology, Physical Fitness physiology, Muscle Strength physiology, Walking Speed physiology, Walking physiology
- Abstract
Background: Walking speed is reduced with aging. However, it is not certain whether the reduced walking speed is associated with physical and coordination fitness. This study explores the physical and coordination determinants of the walking speed decline in older women., Methods: One-hundred-eighty-seven active older women (72.2 ± 6.8 years) were asked to perform a 10-m walk test (self-selected and maximal walking speed) and a battery of the Senior fitness test: lower body strength, lower body flexibility, agility/dynamic balance, and aerobic endurance. Two parameters characterized the walking performance: closeness to the modeled speed minimizing the energetic cost per unit distance (locomotor rehabilitation index, LRI), and the ratio of step length to step cadence (walk ratio, WR). For dependent variables (self-selected and maximal walking speeds), a recursive partitioning algorithm (classification and regression tree) was adopted, highlighting interactions across all the independent variables., Results: Participants were aged from 60 to 88 years, and their self-selected and maximal speeds declined by 22% and 26% ( p < 0.05), respectively. Similarly, all physical fitness variables worsened with aging (muscle strength: 33%; flexibility: 0 to -8 cm; balance: 22%; aerobic endurance: 12%; all p < 0.050). The predictors of maximal walking speed were only WR and balance. No meaningful predictions could be made using LRI and WR as dependent variables., Discussion: The results suggest that at self-selected speed, the decrease in speed itself is sufficient to compensate for the age-related decline in the motor functions tested; by contrast, lowering the WR is required at maximal speed, presumably to prevent imbalance. Therefore, any excessive lowering of LRI and WR indicates loss of homeostasis of walking mechanics and invites diagnostic investigation., Competing Interests: Leonardo A. Peyré-Tartaruga is an Academic Editor for PeerJ., (© 2023 Martins et al.)
- Published
- 2023
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39. Why Questionnaire Scores Are Not Measures: A Question-Raising Article.
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Tesio L, Scarano S, Hassan S, Kumbhare D, and Caronni A
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- Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Outcome Assessment, Health Care
- Abstract
Abstract: Any person is provided by characteristics that can be neither located in body parts nor directly observed (so-called latent variables): these may be behaviors, attitudes, perceptions, motor and cognitive skills, knowledge, emotions, and the like. Physical and rehabilitation medicine frequently faces variables of this kind, the target of many interventions. Latent variables can only be observed through representative behaviors (e.g., walking for independence, moaning for pain, social isolation for depression, etc.). To measure them, behaviors are often listed and summated as items in cumulative questionnaires ("scales"). Questionnaires ultimately provide observations ("raw scores") with the aspect of numbers. Unfortunately, they are only a rough and often misleading approximation to true measures for various reasons. Measures should satisfy the same measurement axioms of physical sciences. In the article, the flaws hidden in questionnaires' scores are summarized, and their consequences in outcome assessment are highlighted. The report should inspire a critical attitude in the readers and foster the interest in modern item response theory, with reference to Rasch analysis., Competing Interests: Financial disclosure statements have been obtained, and no conflicts of interest have been reported by the authors or by any individuals in control of the content of this article., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.)
- Published
- 2023
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40. Balance impairment in myotonic dystrophy type 1: Dynamic posturography suggests the coexistence of a proprioceptive and vestibular deficit.
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Scarano S, Sansone VA, Ferrari Aggradi CR, Carraro E, Tesio L, Amadei M, Rota V, Zanolini A, and Caronni A
- Abstract
Falls are frequent in Myotonic Dystrophy type 1 (DM1), but the pathophysiology of the balance impairment needs further exploration in this disease. The current work aims to provide a richer understanding of DM1 imbalance. Standing balance in 16 patients and 40 controls was tested in two posturographic tests (EquiTest™). In the Sensory Organization Test (SOT), standstill balance was challenged by combining visual (eyes open vs. closed) and environmental conditions (fixed vs. sway-tuned platform and/or visual surround). In the "react" test, reflexes induced by sudden shifts in the support base were studied. Oscillations of the body centre of mass (COM) were measured. In the SOT, COM sway was larger in patients than controls in any condition, including firm support with eyes open (quiet standing). On sway-tuned support, COM oscillations when standing with closed eyes were larger in patients than controls even after taking into account the oscillations with eyes open. In the "react" paradigm, balance reflexes were delayed in patients. Results in both experimental paradigms (i.e., SOT and react test) are consistent with leg muscle weakness. This, however, is not a sufficient explanation. The SOT test highlighted that patients rely on vision more than controls to maintain static balance. Consistently enough, evidence is provided that an impairment of proprioceptive and vestibular systems contributes to falls in DM1. Rehabilitation programs targeted at reweighting sensory systems may be designed to improve safe mobility in DM1., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Scarano, Sansone, Ferrari Aggradi, Carraro, Tesio, Amadei, Rota, Zanolini and Caronni.)
- Published
- 2022
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41. Telephone-based Frontal Assessment Battery (t-FAB): standardization for the Italian population and clinical usability in neurological diseases.
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Aiello EN, Pucci V, Diana L, Niang A, Preti AN, Delli Ponti A, Sangalli G, Scarano S, Tesio L, Zago S, Difonzo T, Appollonio I, Mondini S, and Bolognini N
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Humans, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Reference Standards, Reproducibility of Results, Telephone, Executive Function, Nervous System Diseases diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Despite the relevance of telephone-based cognitive screening tests in clinical practice and research, no specific test assessing executive functioning is available. The present study aimed at standardizing and providing evidence of clinical usability for the Italian telephone-based Frontal Assessment Battery (t-FAB)., Methods: The t-FAB (ranging 0-12), comprising two subtests, has two versions: one requiring motor responses (t-FAB-M) and the other verbal responses (t-FAB-V). Three hundred and forty-six Italian healthy adults (HPs; 143 males; age range = 18-96 years; education range = 4-23 years) and 40 participants with neurological diseases were recruited. To HPs, the t-FAB was administered along with a set of telephone-based tests: MMSE, verbal fluency (VF), backward digit span (BDS). The in-person version of the FAB was administered to both HPs and clinical groups. Factorial structure, construct validity, inter-rater and test-retest reliability, t-FAB-M vs. t-FAB-V equivalence and diagnostic accuracy were assessed. Norms were derived via Equivalent Scores., Results: In HPs, t-FAB measures yielded high inter-rater/test-retest reliability (ICC = .78-.94), were internally related (p ≤ .005) and underpinned by a single component, converging with the telephone-based MMSE, VF, BDS (p ≤ .0013). The two t-FAB versions were statistically equivalent in clinical groups (ps of both equivalence bounds < .001). Education predicted all t-FAB scores (p < .001), whereas age only the t-FAB-M score (p ≤ .004). t-FAB scores converge with the in-person FAB in HPs and clinical groups (r
s = .43-.78). Both t-FAB versions were accurate in discriminating HPs from the clinical cohort (AUC = .73-.76)., Discussion: The t-FAB is a normed, valid, reliable and clinically usable telephone-based cognitive screening test to adopt in both clinical and research practice., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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42. Standard Psychometric Criteria for Measurements in Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine.
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Hassan S, Tesio L, and Kumbhare D
- Subjects
- Humans, Pain, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine
- Abstract
Abstract: Measurements of person's variable, such as behavior, perceptions, or attitudes, are essential to physical and rehabilitation medicine in both clinical practice and research. These measurements are commonly based on cumulative questionnaires and follow special statistical rules, belonging to the domain of psychometrics. Selecting the most appropriate measurement is critical. This article provides an overview of the standard psychometric criteria to consider in measurement selection. The article focuses on the criteria related to the contemporary psychometric approach as it considers the construct, the target population, and the purpose for which measurements are used. Common strategies related to psychometric testing are discussed and applied to critically appraise, as a representative example, one of the most commonly used pain measurements: Brief Pain Inventory. The measurement construct, conceptual framework, target population, purpose, and psychometric properties are highlighted. Observed limitations for its implementation in different settings also are discussed., Competing Interests: Financial disclosure statements have been obtained, and no conflicts of interest have been reported by the authors or by any individuals in control of the content of this article., (Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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43. Balance Impairment in Fahr's Disease: Mixed Signs of Parkinsonism and Cerebellar Disorder. A Case Study.
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Scarano S, Rota V, Tesio L, Perucca L, Robecchi Majnardi A, and Caronni A
- Abstract
Fahr's disease is a rare idiopathic degenerative disease characterized by calcifications in the brain, and has also been associated with balance impairment. However, a detailed analysis of balance in these patients has not been performed. A 69-year-old woman with Fahr's disease presented with a long-lasting subjective imbalance. Balance was analyzed using both clinical (EquiScale, Timed Up and Go test, and Dizziness Handicap Inventory-short form) and instrumented tests (the sway of the body center of mass during quiet, perturbed, and self-perturbed stance, and the peak curvature of the center of mass during single stance while walking on a force-treadmill). The patient's balance was normal during clinical tests and walking. However, during standing, a striking impairment in vestibular control of balance emerged. The balance behavior displayed mixed parkinsonian (e.g., slowness and reduced amplitude of movement) and cerebellar (e.g., increased sway during standing in all conditions and decomposition of movement) features, with a discrepancy between the high severity of the static and the low severity of the dynamic balance impairment. The balance impairment characteristics outlined in this study could help neurologists and physiatrists detect, stage, and treat this rare condition., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Scarano, Rota, Tesio, Perucca, Robecchi Majnardi and Caronni.)
- Published
- 2022
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44. Reliability Validity and Responsiveness of the Spinal Cord Independence Measure 4th Version in a Multicultural Setup.
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Catz A, Itzkovich M, Elkayam K, Michaeli D, Gelernter I, Benjamini Y, Chhabra HS, Tesio L, Engel-Haber E, Bizzarini E, Pilati C, Del Popolo G, Baroncini I, Liu N, Margalho P, Soeira TP, Chandy B, Joshi M, Lemay JF, Curran D, Leiulfsrud AS, Sørensen L, Biering-Sorensen F, Kesiktas N, Osman A, and Bluvshtein V
- Subjects
- Activities of Daily Living, Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Disability Evaluation, Spinal Cord Injuries rehabilitation
- Abstract
Objective: To examine the fourth version of the Spinal Cord Independence Measure for reliability and validity., Design: Partly blinded comparison with the criterion standard Spinal Cord Independence Measure III, and between examiners and examinations., Setting: A multicultural cohort from 19 spinal cord injury units in 11 countries., Participants: A total of 648 patients with spinal cord injury., Intervention: Assessment with Spinal Cord Independence Measure (SCIM IV) and Spinal Cord Independence Measure (SCIM III) on admission to inpatient rehabilitation and before discharge., Main Outcome Measures: SCIM IV interrater reliability, internal consistency, correlation with and difference from SCIM III, and responsiveness., Results: Total agreement between examiners was above 80% on most SCIM IV tasks. All Kappa coefficients were above 0.70 and statistically significant (P<.001). Pearson's coefficients of the correlation between the examiners were above 0.90, and intraclass correlation coefficients were above 0.90. Cronbach's alpha was above 0.96 for the entire SCIM IV, above 0.66 for the subscales, and usually decreased when an item was eliminated. Reliability values were lower for the subscale of respiration and sphincter management, and on admission than at discharge. SCIM IV and SCIM III mean values were very close, and the coefficients of Pearson correlation between them were 0.91-0.96 (P<.001). The responsiveness of SCIM IV was not significantly different from that of SCIM III in most of the comparisons., Conclusions: The validity, reliability, and responsiveness of SCIM IV, which was adjusted to assess specific patient conditions or situations that SCIM III does not address, and which includes more accurate definitions of certain scoring criteria, are very good and quite similar to those of SCIM III. SCIM IV can be used for clinical and research trials, including international multi-center studies, and its group scores can be compared with those of SCIM III., (Copyright © 2021 The American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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45. Kinematic patterns during walking in children: Application of principal component analysis.
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Malloggi C, Zago M, Galli M, Sforza C, Scarano S, and Tesio L
- Subjects
- Adult, Biomechanical Phenomena, Child, Humans, Lower Extremity, Male, Principal Component Analysis, Gait, Walking
- Abstract
The relative displacements of body segments during walking can be reduced to a small number of multi-joint kinematic patterns, pm
k , through Principal Component Analysis (PCA). These patterns were extracted from two groups of children (n = 8, aged 6-9 years, 4 males, and n = 8, aged 10-13 years, 4 males) and 7 adults (21-29 years, 1 male), walking on a treadmill at various velocities, normalized to body stature (adimensional Froude number, Fr). The three-dimensional coordinates of body markers were captured by an optoelectronic system. Five components (pm1 to pm5 ) explained 99.1% of the original dataset variance. The relationship between the variance explained ("size") of each pmk and the Fr velocity varied across movement components and age groups. Only pm1 and pm2 , which described kinematic patterns in the sagittal plane, showed significant differences (at p < 0.05) across pairs of age groups. The time course of the size of all the five components matched various mechanical events of the step cycle at the level of both body system and lower limb joints. Such movement components appeared clinically interpretable and lend themselves as potential markers of neural development of walking., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
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46. The illness-disease dichotomy and the biological-clinical splitting of medicine.
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Tesio L and Buzzoni M
- Subjects
- Causality, Humans, Treatment Outcome, Fatigue Syndrome, Chronic therapy, Medicine
- Abstract
In a recent paper, Sharpe and Greco (2019) argue that some clinical conditions, such as chronic fatigue syndrome (sometimes called myalgic encephalomyelitis), should be treated by altering the patient's experience and response to symptoms without necessarily searching for an underlying cause. As a result, we should allow for the existence of 'illnesses without (underlying) diseases'. Wilshire and Ward (2019) reply that this possibility requires unwarranted causal assumptions about the psychosocial origins of conditions not predicted by a disease model. In so doing, it is argued that Sharpe and Greco introduce epistemological and methodological problems with serious medical consequences, for example, patients feel guilt for seeking treatment for illnesses that only exist 'all in the mind', and medical researchers are discouraged from looking for more effective treatments of such conditions. We propose a view that integrates the insights of both papers. We abandon both the strict distinction between disease and illness and the naïve unidirectional account of causality that accompanies it. This, we claim, is a step towards overcoming the current harmful tendencies to conceptually separate (1) Symptom management and disease-modifying treatments. (2) Rehabilitative-palliative care and 'causal' curing. (3) Most importantly, biomedicine and clinical medicine, where the latter is currently at risk of losing its status as scientific., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2021
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47. Efficacy of Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for Acute Central Post-stroke Pain: A Case Study.
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Malfitano C, Rossetti A, Scarano S, Malloggi C, and Tesio L
- Abstract
Although rare, central post-stroke pain remains one of the most refractory forms of neuropathic pain. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) has been reported to be effective in chronic cases. However, there are no data on the effects in the acute and subacute phases after stroke. In this study, we present a case of a patient with thalamic stroke with acute onset of pain and paresthesia who was responsive to rTMS. After a right thalamic stroke, a 32-year-old woman presented with drug-resistant pain and paresthesia on the left side of the body. There were no motor or sensory deficits, except for blunted thermal sensation and allodynia on light touch. Ten daily sessions were performed, where 10 Hz rTMS was applied to the hand area of the right primary motor cortex, 40 days after stroke. Before rTMS treatment (T0), immediately after treatment conclusion (T1), and 1 month after treatment (T2), three pain questionnaires were administered, and cortical responses to single and paired-pulse TMS were assessed. Eight healthy participants served as controls. At T0, when the patient was experiencing the worst pain, the excitability of the ipsilesional motor cortex was reduced. At T1 and T2, the pain scores and paresthesia' spread decreased. The clinical improvement was paralleled by the recovery in motor cortex excitability of the affected hemisphere, in terms of both intra- and inter-hemispheric connections. In this subacute central post-stroke pain case, rTMS treatment was associated with decreased pain and motor cortex excitability changes., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Malfitano, Rossetti, Scarano, Malloggi and Tesio.)
- Published
- 2021
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48. Multisensory stimulation for the rehabilitation of unilateral spatial neglect.
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Zigiotto L, Damora A, Albini F, Casati C, Scrocco G, Mancuso M, Tesio L, Vallar G, and Bolognini N
- Subjects
- Functional Laterality, Humans, Neuropsychological Tests, Pilot Projects, Perceptual Disorders etiology, Stroke complications, Stroke Rehabilitation
- Abstract
Unilateral spatial neglect (USN) is a neuropsychological syndrome, typically caused by lesions of the right hemisphere, whose features are the defective report of events occurring in the left (contralesional) side of space and the inability to orient and set up actions leftwards. Multisensory integration mechanisms, largely spared in USN patients, may temporally modulate spatial orienting. In this pilot study, the effects of an intensive audio-visual Multisensory Stimulation (MS) on USN were assessed, and compared with those of a treatment that ameliorates USN, Prismatic Adaptation (PA). Twenty USN stroke patients received a 2-week treatment (20 sessions, twice per day) of MS or PA. The effects of MS and PA were assessed by a set of neuropsychological clinical tests (target cancellation, line bisection, sentence reading, personal neglect, complex drawing) and the Catherine Bergego Scale for functional disability. Results showed that MS brought about an amelioration of USN deficits overall comparable to that induced by PA; personal neglect was improved only by MS, not by PA. The clinical gains of the MS treatment were not influenced by duration of disease and lesion volume, and they persisted up to one month post-treatment. In conclusion, MS represents a novel and promising rehabilitation procedure for USN.
- Published
- 2021
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49. The curvature peaks of the trajectory of the body centre of mass during walking: A new index of dynamic balance.
- Author
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Malloggi C, Scarano S, Cerina V, Catino L, Rota V, and Tesio L
- Subjects
- Adult, Biomechanical Phenomena, Exercise Test, Humans, Postural Balance, Gait, Walking
- Abstract
During walking, falling is most likely to occur towards the side of the supporting lower limb during the single stance. Timely lateral redirection of the centre of mass (CoM) preceding the no-return position is necessary for balance. We analysed the curvature peaks (the inverse of the radius of curvature) of the three-dimensional path of the CoM during the entire stride. Twelve healthy adults walked on a force-sensorized treadmill at constant velocities from 0.4 to 1.2 m s
-1 , in 0.2 m s-1 increments. The three-dimensional displacements of the CoM, the muscular power sustaining the CoM motion with respect to the ground, and the efficiency of the pendulum-like transfer of the CoM were computed via the double integration of the ground reaction forces. The curvatures of the CoM trajectory were measured (Frenet-Serret formula). During the single stance, the curvature showed a bell-shaped increment, lasting a few tenths of a millisecond, and peaking at 365-683 m-1 (radius of 2.7-1.4 mm, respectively), the higher the walking velocity. The CoM was redirected towards the swinging lower limb. The curvature increment was sustained by muscle-driven braking of the CoM. Smoother increments of curvature (peaking at approximately 37-150 m-1 ), further orienting the CoM towards the leading lower limb, were observed during the double stance. The peaks of the curvatures were symmetric between the two sides. The high curvature peaks during the single stance may represent an index of dynamic balance during walking. This index might be useful for both rehabilitation and sports training purposes., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
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50. Velocity of the Body Center of Mass During Walking on Split-Belt Treadmill.
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Tesio L, Scarano S, Cerina V, Malloggi C, and Catino L
- Subjects
- Acceleration, Adult, Exercise Test instrumentation, Female, Healthy Volunteers, Humans, Male, Walking Speed physiology, Young Adult, Exercise Test methods, Gait physiology, Walking physiology
- Abstract
Abstract: Walking on split-belt treadmills (each belt rotating at a different velocity) has inspired a growing number of researchers to study gait adaptation and rehabilitation. An overlooked peculiarity of this artificial form of gait is that the mean velocity adopted by the participant, considered as a whole system represented by the body Center of Mass, can be different from the mean velocity of the two belts. Twelve healthy adults (21-34 yrs) were requested to walk for 15 mins on a treadmill with belts rotating at 0.4 and 1.2 m sec-1, respectively (mean = 0.8 m sec-1). Each belt was supported by four 3-dimensional force sensors. For each participant, six strides were analyzed during the 1st and the 15th minute of the trial. The mean Center of Mass velocity was computed as the sum of the velocities of each belt weighted by the percentage of time during which the resulting forces, underlying the accelerations of the Center of Mass, originated from each belt. Across early and late observations, the median Center of Mass velocities were 0.72 and 0.67 m sec-1, respectively (P < 0.05). Therefore, the real velocity of the Center of Mass and its time course should be individually assessed when studying walking on split-belt treadmills., Competing Interests: Financial disclosure statements have been obtained, and no conflicts of interest have been reported by the authors or by any individuals in control of the content of this article., (Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.)
- Published
- 2021
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