216 results on '"Liborio Parrino"'
Search Results
2. Assessment and management of chronic insomnia disorder: an algorithm for primary care physicians
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Hugh Selsick, Anna Heidbreder, Jason Ellis, Luigi Ferini-Strambi, Diego García-Borreguero, Chrysoula Leontiou, Michael S.B. Mak, David O’Regan, and Liborio Parrino
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Chronic insomnia disorder ,Diagnosis and treatment ,Algorithm ,Primary care ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Primary care physicians often lack resources and training to correctly diagnose and manage chronic insomnia disorder. Tools supporting chronic insomnia diagnosis and management could fill this critical gap. A survey was conducted to understand insomnia disorder diagnosis and treatment practices among primary care physicians, and to evaluate a diagnosis and treatment algorithm on its use, to identify ways to optimize it specifically for these providers. Methods A panel of experts developed an algorithm for diagnosing and treating chronic insomnia disorder, based on current guidelines and experience in clinical practice. An online survey was conducted with primary care physicians from France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom, who treat chronic insomnia patients, between January and February 2023. A sub-sample of participants provided open-ended feedback on the algorithm and gave suggestions for improvements. Results Overall, 106 primary care physicians completed the survey. Half (52%, 55/106) reported they did not regularly screen for insomnia and half (51%, 54/106) felt they did not have enough time to address patients’ needs in relation to insomnia or trouble sleeping. The majority (87%,92/106) agreed the algorithm would help diagnose chronic insomnia patients and 82% (87/106) agreed the algorithm would help improve their clinical practice in relation to managing chronic insomnia. Suggestions for improvements were making the algorithm easier to read and use. Conclusion The algorithm developed for, and tested by, primary care physicians to diagnose and treat chronic insomnia disorder may offer significant benefits to providers and their patients through ensuring standardization of insomnia diagnosis and management.
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- 2024
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3. Unraveling sleep respiratory dysfunction in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: Beyond the apnea-hypopnea index and sleep-related hypoxia
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Andi Nuredini, Dario Bottignole, Filippo Stragliati, Pietro Anceschi, Sonia Romano, Irene Pollara, Anna Abramo, Francesco Rausa, Liborio Parrino, Lucia Zinno, and Carlotta Mutti
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Sleep recording ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,Diagnosis ,Hypoventilation ,Noninvasive ventilation ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
The timely introduction of non-invasive ventilation (NIV) is extremely relevant in the multidisciplinary management of patients affected by amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and is based on the proper identification of red flags for early diaphragmatic exhaustion. Polygraphic sleep recording may provide insightful information on the ongoing respiratory impairment; in particular, atypical breathing patterns need to be recognized, as the application of current guidelines for sleep-related hypoxemia or sleep apnea may be insufficient for detecting early signs of diaphragmatic fatigue. We report the case of a 51-year-old man affected by ALS who was asymptomatic for breathing impairment, but whose nocturnal polysomnographic recording, despite not significant for obstructive sleep apnea nor for conventional hypoventilatory patterns, strongly suggested initial respiratory failure, as lately confirmed by the pulmonary follow-up. We discuss the advantages of including sleep recording in the clinical work-up of patients affected by ALS.
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- 2024
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4. Off-label use of cannabidiol in genetic epileptic and developmental encephalopathies: A case report
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Elisa Mannini, Francesco Misirocchi, Stefania Lazzari, Giulia Balella, Dario Bottignole, Maddalena Frapporti, Lucia Zinno, Irene Florindo, Liborio Parrino, and Carlotta Mutti
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Developmental epileptic encephalopathy ,Quality of life ,Cannabidiol ,Epilepsy ,Drug-resistance ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Abstract
Developmental Epileptic encephalopathies (DEEs) are severe neurological conditions where cognitive functions appear modulated by both seizure and interictal epileptiform activity. Cannabidiol (CBD) has been shown to be highly effective in the treatment of drug-resistant seizures in patients with DEEs. Along with its antiseizure effects, CBD demonstrated clinical beneficial effects in patients’ quality of life, sleep and numerous adaptive behaviors. However, based on the available phase III studies, the indications for this treatment have so far been restricted to Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (LGS), Dravet syndrome (DS) and tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) by regulatory authorities. We present the case of a 30-year-old girl with a rare genetic DEE, experiencing relevant seizure frequency reduction together with striking improvement in sleep quality, mood, behavior, language and motor skills after introducing off-label CBD.
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- 2024
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5. Effect of tauroursodeoxycholic acid on survival and safety in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: a retrospective population-based cohort studyResearch in context
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Elisabetta Zucchi, Umberto Maria Musazzi, Guido Fedele, Ilaria Martinelli, Giulia Gianferrari, Cecilia Simonini, Nicola Fini, Andrea Ghezzi, Maria Caputo, Elisabetta Sette, Veria Vacchiano, Lucia Zinno, Pietro Anceschi, Elena Canali, Marco Vinceti, Salvatore Ferro, Jessica Mandrioli, Laura Ferri, Annalisa Gessani, Rocco Liguori, Pietro Cortelli, Roberto Michelucci, Fabrizio Salvi, Ilaria Bartolomei, Anna Maria Borghi, Andrea Zini, Rita Rinaldi, Valeria Tugnoli, Maura Pugliatti, Luca Codeluppi, Franco Valzania, Filippo Stragliati, Andi Nuredini, Sonia Romano, Alessandro D'Orsi, Liborio Parrino, Doriana Medici, Giovanna Pilurzi, Emilio Terlizzi, Donata Guidetti, Silvia De Pasqua, Mario Santangelo, Paola De Massis, Matteo Gizzi, Mario Casmiro, Pietro Querzani, Simonetta Morresi, Maria Vitiello, Marco Longoni, Alberto Patuelli, Susanna Malagù, Francesca Bianchi, Marco Currò Dossi, and Cristiana Ganino
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Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,Tauroursodeoxycholic acid ,Real-world evidence ,Propensity score matching ,Survival ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Summary: Background: Oral tauroursodeoxycholic acid (TUDCA) is a commercial drug currently tested in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) both singly and combined with sodium phenylbutyrate. This retrospective study aimed to investigate, in a real-world setting, whether TUDCA had an impact on the overall survival of patients with ALS who were treated with this drug compared to those patients who received standard care only. Methods: This propensity score–matched study was conducted in the Emilia Romagna Region (Italy), which has had an ALS regional registry since 2009. Out of 627 patients with ALS diagnosed from January 1st, 2015 to June 30th, 2021 and recorded in the registry with available information on death/tracheostomy, 86 patients took TUDCA and were matched in a 1:2 ratio with patients who received only usual care according to age at onset, sex, phenotype, diagnostic latency, ALS Functional Rating Scale-Revised (ALSFRS-R) at first visit, disease progression rate at first visit, and BMI at diagnosis. The primary outcome was survival difference (time from onset of symptoms to tracheostomy/death) between TUDCA exposed and unexposed patients. Findings: A total of 86 patients treated with TUDCA were matched to 172 patients who did not receive treatment. TUDCA-exposed patients were stratified based on dosage (less than or equal to 1000 mg/day or greater) and duration (less than or equal to 12 months or longer) of treatment. The median overall survival was 49.6 months (95% CI 41.7–93.5) among those treated with TUDCA and 36.2 months (95% CI 32.7–41.6) in the control group, with a reduced risk of death observed in patients exposed to a higher dosage (defined as ≥ 1000 mg/day) of TUDCA (HR 0.56; 95% CI 0.38–0.83; p = 0.0042) compared to both the control group and those with lower TUDCA dosages (defined as
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- 2023
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6. Beyond pulsed inhibition: Alpha oscillations modulate attenuation and amplification of neural activity in the awake resting state
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Fabrizio Lombardi, Hans J. Herrmann, Liborio Parrino, Dietmar Plenz, Silvia Scarpetta, Anna Elisabetta Vaudano, Lucilla de Arcangelis, and Oren Shriki
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CP: Neuroscience ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Summary: Alpha oscillations are a distinctive feature of the awake resting state of the human brain. However, their functional role in resting-state neuronal dynamics remains poorly understood. Here we show that, during resting wakefulness, alpha oscillations drive an alternation of attenuation and amplification bouts in neural activity. Our analysis indicates that inhibition is activated in pulses that last for a single alpha cycle and gradually suppress neural activity, while excitation is successively enhanced over a few alpha cycles to amplify neural activity. Furthermore, we show that long-term alpha amplitude fluctuations—the “waxing and waning” phenomenon—are an attenuation-amplification mechanism described by a power-law decay of the activity rate in the “waning” phase. Importantly, we do not observe such dynamics during non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep with marginal alpha oscillations. The results suggest that alpha oscillations modulate neural activity not only through pulses of inhibition (pulsed inhibition hypothesis) but also by timely enhancement of excitation (or disinhibition).
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- 2023
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7. Criticality of neuronal avalanches in human sleep and their relationship with sleep macro- and micro-architecture
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Silvia Scarpetta, Niccolò Morrisi, Carlotta Mutti, Nicoletta Azzi, Irene Trippi, Rosario Ciliento, Ilenia Apicella, Giovanni Messuti, Marianna Angiolelli, Fabrizio Lombardi, Liborio Parrino, and Anna Elisabetta Vaudano
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Biological sciences ,Neuroscience ,Science - Abstract
Summary: Sleep plays a key role in preserving brain function, keeping brain networks in a state that ensures optimal computation. Empirical evidence indicates that this state is consistent with criticality, where scale-free neuronal avalanches emerge. However, the connection between sleep architecture and brain tuning to criticality remains poorly understood. Here, we characterize the critical behavior of avalanches and study their relationship with sleep macro- and micro-architectures, in particular, the cyclic alternating pattern (CAP). We show that avalanches exhibit robust scaling behaviors, with exponents obeying scaling relations consistent with the mean-field directed percolation universality class. We demonstrate that avalanche dynamics is modulated by the NREM-REM cycles and that, within NREM sleep, avalanche occurrence correlates with CAP activation phases—indicating a potential link between CAP and brain tuning to criticality. The results open new perspectives on the collective dynamics underlying CAP function, and on the relationship between sleep architecture, avalanches, and self-organization to criticality.
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- 2023
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8. Sleep medicine: Practice, challenges and new frontiers
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Liborio Parrino, Peter Halasz, Anna Szucs, Robert J. Thomas, Nicoletta Azzi, Francesco Rausa, Silvia Pizzarotti, Alessandro Zilioli, Francesco Misirocchi, and Carlotta Mutti
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sleep ,sleep disorders ,sleep medicine ,sleep diseases ,sleep medicine evolution ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Sleep medicine is an ambitious cross-disciplinary challenge, requiring the mutual integration between complementary specialists in order to build a solid framework. Although knowledge in the sleep field is growing impressively thanks to technical and brain imaging support and through detailed clinic-epidemiologic observations, several topics are still dominated by outdated paradigms. In this review we explore the main novelties and gaps in the field of sleep medicine, assess the commonest sleep disturbances, provide advices for routine clinical practice and offer alternative insights and perspectives on the future of sleep research.
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- 2022
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9. The Contribution of Sleep Texture in the Characterization of Sleep Apnea
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Carlotta Mutti, Irene Pollara, Anna Abramo, Margherita Soglia, Clara Rapina, Carmela Mastrillo, Francesca Alessandrini, Ivana Rosenzweig, Francesco Rausa, Silvia Pizzarotti, Marcello luigi Salvatelli, Giulia Balella, and Liborio Parrino
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cyclic alternating pattern ,sleep texture ,sleep apnea ,polysomnography ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is multi-faceted world-wide-distributed disorder exerting deep effects on the sleeping brain. In the latest years, strong efforts have been dedicated to finding novel measures assessing the real impact and severity of the pathology, traditionally trivialized by the simplistic apnea/hypopnea index. Due to the unavoidable connection between OSA and sleep, we reviewed the key aspects linking the breathing disorder with sleep pathophysiology, focusing on the role of cyclic alternating pattern (CAP). Sleep structure, reflecting the degree of apnea-induced sleep instability, may provide topical information to stratify OSA severity and foresee some of its dangerous consequences such as excessive daytime sleepiness and cognitive deterioration. Machine learning approaches may reinforce our understanding of this complex multi-level pathology, supporting patients’ phenotypization and easing in a more tailored approach for sleep apnea.
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- 2023
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10. Heart rate variability and cognitive performance in adults with cardiovascular risk
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Camillo Imbimbo, Marco Spallazzi, Francesca Ferrari-Pellegrini, Amanda Villa, Alessandro Zilioli, Carlotta Mutti, Liborio Parrino, and Davide Lazzeroni
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Cognitive decline ,Mild cognitive impairment ,Alzheimer's disease ,Cardiovascular risk factors ,Heart rate variability ,Autonomic nervous system imbalances ,Specialties of internal medicine ,RC581-951 ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Background: Heart rate variability (HRV), a measure of autonomic function, has been associated with both cardiovascular disease and cognitive dysfunction. In turn, cardiovascular risk has been linked to an increased risk of dementia onset. However, whether autonomic dysfunction may represent an early marker of cognitive decline in individuals with high cardiovascular risk is still an open issue. Methods: We performed a complete 24-hour HRV analysis in 50 middle-aged and elderly subjects with cardiovascular risk as assessed with the European Society of Cardiology Systematic Coronary Risk Evaluation (ESC SCORE). Cognitive performance was evaluated by Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test (FCSRT) and Stroop Color and Word Test. Stepwise regression was used to identify significant associations between 24-hour ambulatory ECGs parameters and cognitive performances. Results: There were 30 women and 20 men with mean age of 64.9 years (range 51-77) and the mean ESC SCORE was 6%. Four subjects were diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment. Associations were found between measures of HRV and measures of cognition. Ultra-low frequency (ULF) band power of HRV significantly correlated with MoCA (r = 0.424, p = 0.003), also after adjustment for demographics and education. A significant association was also found between the ESC SCORE and ULF band power (r = -0.470, p = 0.0009). Conclusions: Ultra-low frequency band power of HRV is associated with cognitive performance of middle-aged and elderly subjects with cardiovascular risk. This finding may indicate that autonomic nervous system dysregulation plays a role in developing cardiovascular risk and cognitive decline.
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- 2022
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11. Commonalities and Differences in NREM Parasomnias and Sleep-Related Epilepsy: Is There a Continuum Between the Two Conditions?
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Carlotta Mutti, Giorgia Bernabè, Noemi Barozzi, Rosario Ciliento, Irene Trippi, Giuseppe Pedrazzi, Nicoletta Azzi, and Liborio Parrino
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disorders of arousal ,parasomnia ,sleep-related hypermotor epilepsy ,SHE ,cyclic alternating pattern ,CAP ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Introduction: Differential diagnosis between disorders of arousal (DoA) and sleep-related hypermotor epilepsy (SHE) often represents a clinical challenge. The two conditions may be indistinguishable from a semiological point of view and the scalp video-polysomnography is often uninformative. Both disorders are associated with variable hypermotor manifestations ranging from major events to fragments of a hierarchical continuum of increasing intensity, complexity, and duration. Given their semiological overlap we decided to explore the sleep texture of DoA and SHE seeking for similarities and differences.Methods: We analyzed sleep macrostructure and CAP (cyclic alternating pattern) parameters in a cohort of 35 adult DoA patients, 40 SHE patients and 24 healthy sleepers, all recorded and scored in the same sleep laboratory. Nocturnal behavioral manifestations included minor motor events, paroxysmal arousals and major attacks in SHE, and simple, rising, or complex arousal movements in DoA.Results: Compared to healthy controls, DoA and SHE showed similar amounts of sleep efficiency, light sleep, deep sleep, REM sleep, CAP subtypes. Both groups also showed slow wave sleep fragmentation and an increased representation of stage N3 in the second part of the night. The only discriminating elements between the two conditions regarded sleep length (more reduced in DoA) and sleep instability (more elevated in SHE). In DoA recordings, all motor episodes arose from NREM sleep: 37% during light NREM stages and 63% during stage N3 (simple arousal movements: 94%). In SHE recordings, 57% of major attacks occurred during stage N3.Conclusions: So far, emphasis has been placed on the differentiation of sleep-related epilepsy and NREM arousal disorders. However, the impressive analogies between DoA and SHE suggest the existence of an underestimated continuum across the conditions, linked by increased levels of sleep instability, higher amounts of slow wave sleep and NREM/REM sleep imbalance. Sleep texture is extremely similar in the two conditions, although CAP metrics disclose quantitative differences. In particular, SHE patients show a higher arousal instability compared to DoA subjects. Given their clinical and epidemiological overlap, a common genetic background is also hypothesized. In such a perspective, we suggest that the consolidated dichotomy DoA vs. SHE should be reappraised.
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- 2020
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12. Association between psychotropic medication and sleep microstructure: evidence from large population studies
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Simon, Hartmann, Liborio, Parrino, Kristine, Ensrud, Katie L, Stone, Susan, Redline, Scott, Clark, and Mathias, Baumert
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
To assess the association between psychotropic medications and sleep microstructure in large community-based cohorts of older people.We analyzed overnight polysomnograms of 381 women from the Study of Osteoporotic Fractures (SOF) and 2,657 men from the Osteoporotic Fractures in Men Sleep Study (MrOS), who either used no psychotropic medication (n=2,819), only benzodiazepines (n=112), or only selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI) (n=107). Sleep microstructure (cyclic alternating pattern, CAP) was compared between the no medication group and psychotropic medication groups using the Mann-Whitney U-test. Significant differences were investigated using multivariable linear regression adjusted for confounders.CAP rate, arousal index, apnea-hypopnea index, and the frequency of slow, low-amplitude electroencephalography activation phases were significantly lower in MrOS participants using benzodiazepines than participants not taking psychotropic medication. SSRI users in MrOS experienced no altered sleep microstructure compared to those with no psychotropic use. SOF participants using benzodiazepines did not show similar associations with sleep microstructure. However, SSRI users from SOF had a significantly higher frequency of rapid, high-amplitude electroencephalography activation phases (A2 + 3) and periodic limb-movement index than participants not taking psychotropic medication. Multivariable linear regression adjusted for demographic, lifestyle, mood disorders, and health variables indicated additional significant associations between CAP rate and A2 + 3 index, respectively, and benzodiazepine usage in older men, and between CAP rate and SSRI usage in older women.We identified significant associations between sleep microstructure and psychotropic drugs in MrOS and SOF highlighting the importance of comprehensive sleep analysis, including CAP. Our results may help to better understand the differences in sleep-wake mechanisms based on psychotropic usage.Registry: ClinicalTrials.gov; Title: Outcomes of Sleep Disorders in Older Men; Identifier: NCT00070681; URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/record/NCT00070681.
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- 2023
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13. Anti-Gad 65 encephalitis with rapidly progressive temporal atrophy reveals the involvement of the temporal lobe in the neuroanatomical basis of palilalia
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Alessandro Zilioli, Francesco Misirocchi, Beatrice Pancaldi, Elisa Mannini, Carlotta Mutti, Lucia Zinno, Irene Florindo, Marco Spallazzi, and Liborio Parrino
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Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology - Published
- 2023
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14. Time-varying analysis of the heart rate variability during A-phases of sleep: Healthy and pathologic conditions.
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Guadalupe Dorantes-Méndez, Martín O. Méndez, Alfonso Alba, Liborio Parrino, and Giulia Milioli
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- 2018
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15. EEG Spectral Coherence Analysis in Nocturnal Epilepsy.
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Giovanni Busonera, Marco Cogoni, Monica Puligheddu, Raffaele Ferri, Giulia Milioli, Liborio Parrino, Francesco Marrosu, and Gianluigi Zanetti
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- 2018
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16. Heart rate variability in cyclic alternating pattern during sleep in healthy and Nocturnal Front Lobe Epilepsy patients.
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Guadalupe Dorantes-Méndez, Martín O. Méndez, Alfonso Alba, Jose Saul González, Liborio Parrino, and Giulia Milioli
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- 2015
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17. Rasagiline, sleep quality and well-being in Parkinson’s disease: a pilot study
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Carlotta Mutti, Roberta Beatrice Sarnataro, Jessica Beretta, Poli Enzo, Anna Negrotti, Francesco Rausa, Silvia Pizzarotti, and Liborio Parrino
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neurology (clinical) ,Dermatology ,General Medicine - Published
- 2022
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18. Sleep macro- and micro-structure in autoimmune encephalitis: single case report from the subacute phase of the disease to the follow-up
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Carlotta Mutti, Marco Cesare Angeli, Francesco Rausa, Valentina Tontini, Silvia Pizzarotti, Margherita Soglia, Irene Pollara, Clara Rapina, Nicoletta Azzi, Lucia Zinno, and Liborio Parrino
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Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Polysomnography ,Encephalitis ,Humans ,Electroencephalography ,Female ,Hashimoto Disease ,Neurology (clinical) ,Sleep ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Sleep disorders are frequently described in autoimmune encephalitis (AE); however, data on sleep texture are fragmentary. We analyzed the polysomnography of a woman affected by AE, and we performed cyclic alternating pattern (CAP) scoring during the subacute phase of the disease and at follow-up. The first polysomnography showed deviations both at macro and microstructure levels, with a marked reduction of CAP rate compare to healthy sleepers (20.8% vs 33%). After 6-months sleep macrostructure improved, whilst CAP parameters remained abnormal. This is the first polysomnographic analysis, comprehensive of microstructural data, performed in AE. We briefly discuss the results.
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- 2022
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19. Analysis of A-phase transitions during the cyclic alternating pattern under normal sleep.
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Martín Oswaldo Méndez, Ioanna Chouvarda, Alfonso Alba, Anna Maria Bianchi, Andrea Grassi, Edgar Arce Santana, Giulia Milioli, Mario Giovanni Terzano, and Liborio Parrino
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- 2016
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20. Characterization of the autonomic system during the cyclic alternating pattern of sleep.
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Jose Saul González-Salazar, Alfonso Alba, Martín O. Méndez, Jose Martin Luna-Rivera, Liborio Parrino, Andrea Grassi, Mario G. Terzano, and Giulia Milioli
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- 2014
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21. Relation between heart beat fluctuations and cyclic alternating pattern during sleep in insomnia patients.
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Luz Roxanna De León-Lomelí, J. S. Murguía, Ioanna Chouvarda, Martín O. Méndez, Emilio J. González-Galván, Alfonso Alba, Giulia Milioli, Andrea Grassi, Mario G. Terzano, and Liborio Parrino
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- 2014
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22. On separability of A-phases during the cyclic alternating pattern.
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Martín O. Méndez, Alfonso Alba, Ioanna Chouvarda, Giulia Milioli, Andrea Grassi, Mario G. Terzano, and Liborio Parrino
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- 2014
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23. Insomnia types and sleep microstructure dynamics.
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Ioanna Chouvarda, Andrea Grassi, Martín O. Méndez, Anna M. Bianchi, Liborio Parrino, Giulia Milioli, Mario G. Terzano, Nicos Maglaveras, and Sergio Cerutti
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- 2013
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24. Disorders of arousal and sleep-related hypermotor epilepsy — overview and challenges night is a battlefield of sleep and arousal promoting forces
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Péter Halász, Anna Szűcs, Carlotta Mutti, and Liborio Parrino
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Parasomnias ,Humans ,Sleep Stages ,Neurology (clinical) ,Dermatology ,General Medicine ,Arousal ,Sleep ,Epilepsy, Reflex - Abstract
Arousability and reactivity to sensory stimuli are essential features of sleep, discriminating it from coma and keeping the sleeper in contact with the environment. Arousals and oscillations during sleep serve the reversibility of sleep and carry an alarm function awakening the sleeper in danger. In this review, we will explore mechanisms and circuits involved in arousal intrusions within the sleep texture, focusing on the significance of these phenomena in two sleep-related conditions: NREM sleep parasomnias and sleep-related hypermotor epilepsy. Knowledges and gaps in the field are discussed.
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- 2022
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25. Nonlinear analysis of the change points between A and B phases during the Cyclic Alternating Pattern under normal sleep.
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Ioanna Chouvarda, Martín O. Méndez, Alfonso Alba, Anna M. Bianchi, Andrea Grassi, Edgar Arce Santana, Valentina Rosso, Mario G. Terzano, and Liborio Parrino
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- 2012
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26. A novel method to assist the detection of the Cyclic Alternating Pattern (CAP).
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José Manuel Tenorio, Alfonso Alba, Martín O. Méndez, Anna M. Bianchi, Andrea Grassi, Edgar Arce Santana, Ioanna Chouvarda, Sara Mariani, Valentina Rosso, Mario G. Terzano, and Liborio Parrino
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- 2012
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27. Automatic detection of CAP on central and fronto-central EEG leads via support vector machines.
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Sara Mariani, Andrea Grassi, Martín O. Méndez, Liborio Parrino, Mario G. Terzano, and Anna M. Bianchi
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- 2011
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28. CAP sleep in insomnia: New methodological aspects for sleep microstructure analysis.
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Ioanna Chouvarda, Martín O. Méndez, Valentina Rosso, Anna M. Bianchi, Liborio Parrino, Andrea Grassi, Mario Giovanni Terzano, Nicos Maglaveras, and Sergio Cerutti
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- 2011
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29. Now That Automatic Processing Makes Cap Scoring Fast And Reliable Is The Sleep Field Ready For A Paradigm Shift?
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Liborio Parrino
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Physiology (medical) ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2022
30. Sleep and brain evolution across the human lifespan: A mutual embrace
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Carlotta Mutti, Francesco Misirocchi, Alessandro Zilioli, Francesco Rausa, Silvia Pizzarotti, Marco Spallazzi, and Liborio Parrino
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Sleep can be considered a window to ascertain brain wellness: it dynamically changes with brain maturation and can even indicate the occurrence of concealed pathological processes. Starting from prenatal life, brain and sleep undergo an impressive developmental journey that accompanies human life throughout all its steps. A complex mutual influence rules this fascinating course and cannot be ignored while analysing its evolution. Basic knowledge on the significance and evolution of brain and sleep ontogenesis can improve the clinical understanding of patient’s wellbeing in a more holistic perspective. In this review we summarized the main notions on the intermingled relationship between sleep and brain evolutionary processes across human lifespan, with a focus on sleep microstructure dynamics.
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- 2022
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31. Criticality of neuronal avalanches in human sleep and their relationship with sleep macro- and micro-architecture
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Silvia Scarpetta, Niccolò Morrisi, Carlotta Mutti, Nicoletta Azzi, Irene Trippi, Rosario Ciliento, Ilenia Apicella, Giovanni Messuti, Marianna Angiolelli, Fabrizio Lombardi, Liborio Parrino, and Anna Elisabetta Vaudano
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Sleep plays a key role in preserving brain function, keeping the brain network in a state that ensures optimal computational capabilities. Empirical evidence indicates that such a state is consistent with criticality, where scale-free neuronal avalanches emerge. However, the relationship between sleep, emergent avalanches, and criticality remains poorly understood. Here we fully characterize the critical behavior of avalanches during sleep, and study their relationship with the sleep macro- and micro-architecture, in particular the cyclic alternating pattern (CAP). We show that avalanche size and duration distributions exhibit robust power laws with exponents approximately equal to −3/2 e −2, respectively. Importantly, we find that sizes scale as a power law of the durations, and that all critical exponents for neuronal avalanches obey robust scaling relations, which are consistent with the mean-field directed percolation universality class. Our analysis demonstrates that avalanche dynamics depends on the position within the NREM-REM cycles, with the avalanche density increasing in the descending phases and decreasing in the ascending phases of sleep cycles. Moreover, we show that, within NREM sleep, avalanche occurrence correlates with CAP activation phases, particularly A1, which are the expression of slow wave sleep propensity and have been proposed to be beneficial for cognitive processes. The results suggest that neuronal avalanches, and thus tuning to criticality, actively contribute to sleep development and play a role in preserving network function. Such findings, alongside characterization of the universality class for avalanches, open new avenues to the investigation of functional role of criticality during sleep with potential clinical application.Significance statementWe fully characterize the critical behavior of neuronal avalanches during sleep, and show that avalanches follow precise scaling laws that are consistent with the mean-field directed percolation universality class. The analysis provides first evidence of a functional relationship between avalanche occurrence, slow-wave sleep dynamics, sleep stage transitions and occurrence of CAP phase A during NREM sleep. Because CAP is considered one of the major guardians of NREM sleep that allows the brain to dynamically react to external perturbation and contributes to the cognitive consolidation processes occurring in sleep, our observations suggest that neuronal avalanches at criticality are associated with flexible response to external inputs and to cognitive processes, a key assumption of the critical brain hypothesis.
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- 2022
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32. REM sleep, REM parasomnias, REM sleep behaviour disorder
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Anna Szűcs, Carlotta Mutti, Anikó Papp, Péter Halász, and Liborio Parrino
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Sleep Wake Disorders ,Parasomnias ,Neurology ,Synucleinopathies ,Humans ,Sleep, REM ,Neurology (clinical) ,REM Sleep Behavior Disorder - Abstract
We review the literature on REM parasomnias, and their the underlying mechanisms. Several REM parasomnias are consistent with sleep dissociations, where certain elements of the REM sleep pattern emerge in an inadequate time (sleep paralysis, hypnagogic hallucinations and cataplexy) or are absent/partial in their normal REM sleep time (REM sleep without atonia, underlying REM sleep behavior disorder). The rest of REM parasomnias (sleep related painful erection, catathrenia) may have other still unclear mechanisms. REM parasomnias deserve attention, because in addition to disturbing sleep and causing injuries, they may shed light on REM sleep functions as well as the heterogeneous etiologies of parasomnias. One of them, REM sleep behavior disorder has special importance as a warning sign of evolving neurodegenerative conditions mainly synucleinopathies (some cases synucleinopathies themselves) and it is a model parasomnia revealing that parasomnias may have by autoimmune, iatrogenic and even psychosomatic etiologies.Áttekintjük a REM-parasomniák irodalmát, és röviden foglalkozunk a hátterükben álló mechanizmussal. A csoport tagjainak egy része alvásdisszociációnak felel meg, ahol a REM-alvás egyes elemei inadekvát fázisban (például alvási paralysis, hypnagog hallucinációk) jelennek meg, vagy fordítva, elmaradnak/töredékesek a REM-alvás alatt, amelynek egyébként fiziológiás részei (REM-alvás izomatónia nélkül, a REM-magatartászavar hátterében álló rendellenesség). A többi REM-parasomnia (alvásfüggő fájdalmas erectio, catathrenia) hátterében egyéb, egyelőre tisztázatlan mechanizmus állhat. A REM-parasomniák alvászavart és sérüléseket okozhatnak, és tanulmányozásuk megvilágíthatja a REM-alvás funkcióit és a parasomniák hátterében álló sokszínű etiológiát. A REM-magatartászavarnak különleges jelentősége van: neurodegeneratív betegségek, különösen synucleinopathiák előjele (vagy kísérője) lehet, talán maga is az. Egyben modell-rendellenesség, ami autoimmun, iatrogén és pszichoszomatikus zavarok feltárását teheti lehetővé.
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- 2022
33. A Novel CSF1R Mutation Mimicking Frontotemporal Dementia: A Glimpse into a Microgliopathy
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Francesco Misirocchi, Alessandro Zilioli, Alberto Benussi, Sabina Capellari, Carlotta Mutti, Irene Florindo, Marco Spallazzi, and Liborio Parrino
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Microgliopathy ,Neurology ,Leukoencephalopathy ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine ,CSF1R ,Frontotemporal dementia ,Neurogenetics - Published
- 2022
34. Efficient automatic classifiers for the detection of A phases of the cyclic alternating pattern in sleep.
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Sara Mariani, Elena Manfredini, Valentina Rosso, Andrea Grassi, Martín O. Méndez, Alfonso Alba, Matteo Matteucci, Liborio Parrino, Mario G. Terzano, Sergio Cerutti, and Anna M. Bianchi
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- 2012
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35. Clinical characteristics of a large cohort of patients with narcolepsy candidate for pitolisant: a cross-sectional study from the Italian PASS Wakix® Cohort
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Carlotta Mutti, Valerio Brunetti, Michela Figorilli, Claudio Liguori, Fabio Pizza, Paola Proserpio, Tommaso Sacco, Giuseppe Pedrazzi, Isabelle Lecomte, Nora Blanchard, Elio Clemente Agostoni, Enrica Bonanni, Diego Centonze, Alessandro Cicolin, Giacomo Della Marca, Luigi Ferini-Strambi, Raffaele Ferri, Gian Luigi Gigli, Francesca Izzi, Rocco Liguori, Raffaele Lodi, Lino Nobili, Liborio Parrino, Fabio Placidi, Monica Puligheddu, Andrea Romigi, Maria Antonietta Savarese, Michele Terzaghi, Giuseppe Plazzi, Mutti C., Brunetti V., Figorilli M., Liguori C., Pizza F., Proserpio P., Sacco T., Pedrazzi G., Lecomte I., Blanchard N., Agostoni E.C., Bonanni E., Centonze D., Cicolin A., Della Marca G., Ferini-Strambi L., Ferri R., Gigli G.L., Izzi F., Liguori R., Lodi R., Nobili L., Parrino L., Placidi F., Puligheddu M., Romigi A., Savarese M.A., Terzaghi M., and Plazzi G.
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Cross-Sectional Studie ,Sleepine ,Sleepiness ,Dermatology ,General Medicine ,Disorders of Excessive Somnolence ,Pitolisant ,Settore MED/26 ,Combined therapy ,Polytherapy ,Sleep ,Treatment ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Humans ,Piperidines ,Narcolepsy ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Piperidine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Human - Abstract
Introduction Narcolepsy is a chronic and rare hypersomnia of central origin characterized by excessive daytime sleepiness and a complex array of symptoms as well as by several medical comorbidities. With growing pharmacological options, polytherapy may increase the possibility of a patient-centered management of narcolepsy symptoms. The aims of our study are to describe a large cohort of Italian patients with narcolepsy who were candidates for pitolisant treatment and to compare patients’ subgroups based on current drug prescription (drug-naïve patients in whom pitolisant was the first-choice treatment, switching to pitolisant from other monotherapy treatments, and adding on in polytherapy). Methods We conducted a cross-sectional survey based on Italian data from the inclusion visits of the Post Authorization Safety Study of pitolisant, a 5-year observational, multicenter, international study. Results One hundred ninety-one patients were enrolled (76.4% with narcolepsy type 1 and 23.6% with narcolepsy type 2). Most patients (63.4%) presented at least one comorbidity, mainly cardiovascular and psychiatric. Pitolisant was prescribed as an add-on treatment in 120/191 patients (62.8%), as switch from other therapies in 42/191 (22.0%), and as a first-line treatment in 29/191 (15.2%). Drug-naive patients presented more severe sleepiness, lower functional status, and a higher incidence of depressive symptoms. Conclusion Our study presents the picture of a large cohort of Italian patients with narcolepsy who were prescribed with pitolisant, suggesting that polytherapy is highly frequent to tailor a patient-centered approach.
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- 2022
36. Relapsing-remitting psychosis with malignant catatonia: a multidisciplinary challenge
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Maria Lidia Gerra, Carlotta Mutti, Lorenzo Luviè, Benyamin Daniel Daniel, Irene Florindo, Edoardo Picetti, Liborio Parrino, Carlo Marchesi, and Lucia Zinno
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Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Psychotic Disorders ,Humans ,Catatonia ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Electroconvulsive Therapy - Abstract
Malignant catatonia is a life-threatening syndrome that could be observed in various psychiatric and neurological conditions. We describe the challenging case of a young woman with relapsing-remitting malignant catatonia, which finally resolve after electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). Details regarding her psychiatric symptoms, dynamics, and EEG features during each acute and post-acute phases of the disease are described and long-term follow-ups are provided. We emphasize the importance of a multidisciplinary cross talk between neurologists and psychiatrists to ensure adequate management of this dangerous condition. Knowledge and gaps in the field of autoimmune psychosis are also discussed.
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- 2022
37. Chronic Insomnia Disorder across Europe: Expert Opinion on Challenges and Opportunities to Improve Care
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Jason Ellis, Luigi Ferini-Strambi, Diego García-Borreguero, Anna Heidbreder, David O’Regan, Liborio Parrino, Hugh Selsick, and Thomas Penzel
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Health Information Management ,Leadership and Management ,Health Policy ,Health Informatics - Abstract
One in ten adults in Europe have chronic insomnia, which is characterised by frequent and persistent difficulties initiating and/or maintaining sleep and daily functioning impairments. Regional differences in practices and access to healthcare services lead to variable clinical care across Europe. Typically, a patient with chronic insomnia (a) will usually present to a primary care physician; (b) will not be offered cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia—the recommended first-line treatment; (c) will instead receive sleep hygiene recommendations and eventually pharmacotherapy to manage their long-term condition; and (d) will use medications such as GABA receptor agonists for longer than the approved duration. Available evidence suggests that patients in Europe have multiple unmet needs, and actions for clearer diagnosis of chronic insomnia and effective management of this condition are long overdue. In this article, we provide an update on the clinical management of chronic insomnia in Europe. Old and new treatments are summarised with information on indications, contraindications, precautions, warnings, and side effects. Challenges of treating chronic insomnia in European healthcare systems, considering patients’ perspectives and preferences are presented and discussed. Finally, suggestions are provided—with healthcare providers and healthcare policy makers in mind—for strategies to achieve the optimal clinical management.
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- 2023
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38. Epileptiform patterns predicting unfavorable outcome in postanoxic patients: A matter of time?
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Francesco Misirocchi, Giorgia Bernabè, Lucia Zinno, Marco Spallazzi, Alessandro Zilioli, Elisa Mannini, Stefania Lazzari, Valentina Tontini, Carlotta Mutti, Liborio Parrino, Edoardo Picetti, and Irene Florindo
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Neurology ,Physiology (medical) ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine - Published
- 2023
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39. Cyclic alternating patterns and arousals: what is relevant in obstructive sleep apnea? In Memoriam Mario Giovanni Terzano
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Liborio Parrino, Nicoletta Azzi, Francesco Rausa, Carlotta Mutti, and Irene Pollara
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sleep Apnea, Obstructive ,Continuous Positive Airway Pressure ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Polysomnography ,Eye movement ,Excessive daytime sleepiness ,Cognition ,medicine.disease ,Sleep architecture ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Treatment efficacy ,Obstructive sleep apnea ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,medicine ,Humans ,Continuous positive airway pressure ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Arousal ,Sleep - Abstract
Purpose of review To review main knowledges and gaps in the field of sleep microstructure, represented by the cyclic alternating pattern (CAP), in obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Recent findings The (electroencephalographic and autonomic) 'intensity' of arousals in OSA patients, measured through the metrics of CAP, correlate with OSA severity and with disease burden. Continuous positive airway pressure determines variations in sleep architecture (conventional parameters) and at the microstructural level, at different time points. Summary CAP is not only an 'attractor' of arousals, but also organizes distribution of K-complexes and delta bursts in non-rapid eye movement sleep. Although attention is always concentrated on the A-phase of CAP, a crucial role is play by the phase B, which reflects a period of transient inhibition. Respiratory events in OSA are a typical example of phase B-associated condition, as they occur during the interval between successive A-phases. Accordingly sleep microstructure provides useful insights in the pathophysiology and estimation of OSA severity and may be exploited to follow-up treatment efficacy. In the complex relationship among sleep fragmentation, excessive daytime sleepiness, cognition and cardiovascular risk the CAP framework can offer an integrative perspective in a multidisciplinary scenario.
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- 2021
40. Sleep in Neurologic Disorders
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Liborio Parrino, Francesco Rausa, and Carlotta Mutti
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Sleep Wake Disorders ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Cognition ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Epilepsy ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Synaptic plasticity ,medicine ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychological resilience ,Nervous System Diseases ,business ,Sleep ,Stroke ,Neuroscience ,Neurorehabilitation ,media_common - Abstract
Sleep is a complex brain state with fundamental relevance for cognitive functions, synaptic plasticity, brain resilience, and autonomic balance. Sleep pathologies may interfere with cerebral circuit organization, leading to negative consequences and favoring the development of neurologic disorders. Conversely, the latter can interfere with sleep functions. Accordingly, assessment of sleep quality is always recommended in the diagnosis of patients with neurologic disorders and during neurorehabilitation programs. This review investigates the complex interplay between sleep and brain pathologies, focusing on diseases in which the association with sleep disturbances is commonly overlooked and whereby major benefits may derive from their proper management.
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- 2021
41. Sleep medicine catalogue of knowledge and skills - Revision
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Zoran Dogas, Liborio Parrino, Dieter Riemann, Teresa Paiva, Thomas Penzel, Thomas Pollmächer, Marco Zucconi, Erna-Sif Arnardottir, Tiina Paunio, Claudio L. Bassetti, Fabio Cirignotta, Ludger Grote, Lino Nobili, Walter T. McNicholas, Marie-Pia d'Ortho, Dirk Pevernagie, Andrea Rodenbeck, Philippe Peigneux, Elizabeth A Hill, Department of Psychiatry, and HUS Psychiatry
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Curriculum ,Humans ,Sleep ,Neurology ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,education ,MEDLINE ,610 Medicine & health ,Sleep medicine ,3124 Neurology and psychiatry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Blueprint ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,medicine ,International Classification of Sleep Disorders ,Neuropsychologie ,Imagerie cérébrale fonctionnelle ,Interdisciplinarity ,Not available ,Medical education ,Neurosciences cognitives ,General Medicine ,Sciences biomédicales ,catalogue of knowledge and skills ,3. Good health ,Psychopathologie ,030228 respiratory system ,Sleep (system call) ,610 Medizin und Gesundheit ,Sleep Disorders ,Psychology ,Psychologie cognitive ,600 Technik, Medizin, angewandte Wissenschaften::610 Medizin und Gesundheit::610 Medizin und Gesundheit ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The 'catalogue of knowledge and skills' for sleep medicine presents the blueprint for a curriculum, a textbook, and an examination on sleep medicine. The first catalogue of knowledge and skills was presented by the European Sleep Research Society in 2014. It was developed following a formal Delphi procedure. A revised version was needed in order to incorporate changes that have occurred in the meantime in the International Classification of Sleep Disorders, updates in the manual for scoring sleep and associated events, and, most important, new knowledge in sleep physiology and pathophysiology. In addition, another major change can be observed in sleep medicine: a paradigm shift in sleep medicine has taken place. Sleep medicine is no longer a small interdisciplinary field in medicine. Sleep medicine has increased in terms of recognition and importance in medical care. Consequently, major medical fields (e.g. pneumology, cardiology, neurology, psychiatry, otorhinolaryngology, paediatrics) recognise that sleep disorders become a necessity for education and for diagnostic assessment in their discipline. This paradigm change is considered in the catalogue of knowledge and skills revision by the addition of new chapters., info:eu-repo/semantics/published
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- 2021
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42. Overnight shifts from obstructive to mixed sleep apneas can be a biomarker of OSA severity
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Liborio Parrino, Irene Pollara, Carlotta Mutti, Ivana Rosenzweig, Margherita Soglia, Nicoletta Azzi, and Francesca Alessandrini
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Oncology ,Sleep Apnea, Obstructive ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Polysomnography ,General Medicine ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Sleep Apnea Syndromes ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Biomarker (medicine) ,business ,Biomarkers - Published
- 2021
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43. Epidemiology, management and outcome of status epilepticus in adults: single-center Italian survey
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Irene Trippi, Giampiero Monti, Lucia Zinno, Carlotta Mutti, Liborio Parrino, Claudia Vener, Irene Florindo, Angelo Sansonetti, Anna Elisabetta Vaudano, and Giorgia Bernabè
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Population ,Dermatology ,Status epilepticus ,Single Center ,Severity of Illness Index ,Epilepsy ,Status Epilepticus ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Neuroradiology ,Retrospective Studies ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Management ,Prognosis ,STESS ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cohort ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosurgery ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
The official variations of status epilepticus (SE) International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE, 2015) diagnostic criteria and the non-convulsive SE (NCSE) Salzburg Consensus Criteria (2013), impose the collection of updated population-based epidemiological Italian data. In this study, we aimed at evaluating (a) the frequency of SE in our hospital adopting the new ILAE 2015 SE diagnostic criteria and NCSE Salzburg Consensus Criteria, (b) the frequency of adherence to current treatment guidelines for SE and their relationship with patients’ outcome, and (c) reliability of standardized prognostic scales (Status Epilepticus Severity Score—STESS—and modified STESS) for short-term outcome prediction in the setting of the newest diagnostic criteria for SE and NCSE. Detailed clinical and electrophysiological data collected in a 1-year retrospective hospital-based single-center survey on SE at Parma Hospital, Northern Italy are provided. Non-adherence to current treatment guidelines was recorded in around 50% cases, but no relation to outcome was appreciated. Mortality in our cohort increased from 30 to 50% when follow-up was extended to 30 days. STESS score was strongly correlated with short-term mortality risk (OR 18.9, 2.2–163.5, CI), and we confirm its role as easy-to-use tool for outcome evaluation also when the new ILAE diagnostic SE criteria are applied.
- Published
- 2021
44. Nocturnal Arousal Phenomenon and the Autonomic Nervous System
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Liborio Parrino
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Sleep Stages ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Electroencephalography ,medicine.disease ,Obstructive sleep apnea ,Autonomic nervous system ,Internal medicine ,Breathing ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Wakefulness ,Vagal tone ,business ,Slow-wave sleep - Abstract
Electroencephalographic (EEG) arousals are intrusions of wakefulness within sleep. These phasic events occur rarely as isolated phenomena, but appear organized in regular sequences known as the cyclic alternating pattern (CAP). Lack of EEG arousals is scored as non-CAP. The CAP metrics offer a more dynamic evaluation of polysomnographic features beyond the conventional sleep stages. The temporal relation between CAP and autonomic activation (phase A) and deactivation (phase B) provides a coupled view of what happens upstairs (brain, EEG) and downstairs (body, vegetative functions). In obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS), most respiratory events are followed by a dual response (A phase associated with a relevant pulse wave amplitude drop). The combined cortical and autonomic activation suggests a possible role of pulse wave amplitude as a marker of the EEG response to airflow reduction or increased upper airway resistance. Moreover, dual responses show a progressive increase from flow limitations to hypopneas and apneas indicating that the arousal response evolves into a more powerful and extensive activation as airway obstruction increases. Cardiopulmonary coupling (CPC) is a frequency-based method that captures the phase differences (or degree of coupling) between the electrocardiogram (ECG)-derived respiration and the R-R intervals. Analyzing ratios between CPC and the main heart rate frequency bands, the preponderance of power ratio in the low (sympathetic) frequency is correlated with CAP periods and can be an indication of periodic respiration during sleep-disordered breathing. In contrast, a preponderance of power in the high (parasympathetic) frequency is associated with deep sleep, physiologic respiratory sinus arrhythmia, and non-CAP periods.
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- 2021
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45. Sleep features in Lymphangioleiomyomatosis and their relationship with disease severity: a pilot study
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Stefano Nava, Stefano Oldani, Francesco Fanfulla, Francesco Tavalazzi, Massimiliano Perziano, Andrea Fabiani, Liborio Parrino, Nicoletta Azzi, Irene Prediletto, Carlotta Mutti, Prediletto I., Tavalazzi F., Perziano M., Fanfulla F., Fabiani A., Oldani S., Azzi N., Mutti C., Parrino L., and Nava S.
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Polysomnography ,Pilot Projects ,Cyclic alternating pattern ,Gastroenterology ,Non-rapid eye movement sleep ,Severity of Illness Index ,Pulmonary function testing ,DLCO ,Lymphangioleiomyomatosi ,Internal medicine ,Severity of illness ,medicine ,Humans ,REMOSA ,Pilot Project ,Lymphangioleiomyomatosis ,Sleep disorder ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,respiratory system ,Sleep quality ,medicine.disease ,respiratory tract diseases ,Obstructive sleep apnea ,Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome ,business ,Sleep ,Human - Abstract
Lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) is a rare pulmonary disease characterized by progressive airflow limitation. We conducted a pilot trial to investigate the incidence of sleep disorders, sleep quality and their relationship with disease severity. We performed pulmonary function tests, blood gas analysis, overnight 12-channels polysomnography and clinical assessments in 15 consecutive LAM patients. For statistics, p values < 0.05 were considered significant. Sleep efficiency (SE) was inversely correlated with RV/TLC (p = 0.035) and positively with daytime SpO2 (p = 0.010) and PaO2 (p = 0.011). Three cases had obstructive sleep apnea (OSA); seven patients (46.7%) showed a REMOSA. AHIREM was correlated with FEV1% (r = 0.75, p = 0.003), TLC% (r = 0.57, p = 0.026), RV% (r = 0.8, p= 0.05). four subjects had nocturnal hypoxia (T90 ≥ 1% of TST) showing lower values of DLCO%, daytime SpO2%, PaO2, FEV1% and a higher value of VR/TLC comparing with the subgroup with normal T90 (p < 0.05). This pilot study shows that sleep alterations could be frequent in LAM and associated to disease severity. Nocturnal hypoxemia and SE were related to lung function impairment. A dysregulation of sleep seems to involve exclusively REM phase, while NREM appears to be preserved. This phenomenon might be linked to the pathophysiology of disease: our study, even with the limits of the small sample size, showed that the presence of REMOSA is related to the disease severity, in particular to the degree of airflow limitation and hyperinflation. More studies are needed to assess this topic.
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- 2021
46. Intra period CAP kinetics to stressful perturbation: a message from obstructive sleep apnea
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Anna Szucs, Nicoletta Azzi, Carlotta Mutti, Liborio Parrino, and Péter Halász
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Sleep Apnea, Obstructive ,business.industry ,Period (gene) ,Polysomnography ,Perturbation (astronomy) ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Obstructive sleep apnea ,Kinetics ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Humans ,business - Published
- 2020
47. Commonalities and Differences in NREM Parasomnias and Sleep-Related Epilepsy: Is There a Continuum Between the Two Conditions?
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Rosario Ciliento, Giuseppe Pedrazzi, Noemi Barozzi, Liborio Parrino, Irene Trippi, Carlotta Mutti, Nicoletta Azzi, and Giorgia Bernabè
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medicine.medical_specialty ,SHE ,cyclic alternating pattern ,Audiology ,Non-rapid eye movement sleep ,lcsh:RC346-429 ,Arousal ,sleep microstructure ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,disorders of arousal ,medicine ,Sleep-related epilepsy ,lcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,Slow-wave sleep ,Original Research ,business.industry ,parasomnia ,sleep-related hypermotor epilepsy ,Parasomnia ,medicine.disease ,Sleep in non-human animals ,CAP ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030228 respiratory system ,Neurology ,Scalp ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Introduction: Differential diagnosis between disorders of arousal (DoA) and sleep-related hypermotor epilepsy (SHE) often represents a clinical challenge. The two conditions may be indistinguishable from a semiological point of view and the scalp video-polysomnography is often uninformative. Both disorders are associated with variable hypermotor manifestations ranging from major events to fragments of a hierarchical continuum of increasing intensity, complexity, and duration. Given their semiological overlap we decided to explore the sleep texture of DoA and SHE seeking for similarities and differences.Methods: We analyzed sleep macrostructure and CAP (cyclic alternating pattern) parameters in a cohort of 35 adult DoA patients, 40 SHE patients and 24 healthy sleepers, all recorded and scored in the same sleep laboratory. Nocturnal behavioral manifestations included minor motor events, paroxysmal arousals and major attacks in SHE, and simple, rising, or complex arousal movements in DoA.Results: Compared to healthy controls, DoA and SHE showed similar amounts of sleep efficiency, light sleep, deep sleep, REM sleep, CAP subtypes. Both groups also showed slow wave sleep fragmentation and an increased representation of stage N3 in the second part of the night. The only discriminating elements between the two conditions regarded sleep length (more reduced in DoA) and sleep instability (more elevated in SHE). In DoA recordings, all motor episodes arose from NREM sleep: 37% during light NREM stages and 63% during stage N3 (simple arousal movements: 94%). In SHE recordings, 57% of major attacks occurred during stage N3.Conclusions: So far, emphasis has been placed on the differentiation of sleep-related epilepsy and NREM arousal disorders. However, the impressive analogies between DoA and SHE suggest the existence of an underestimated continuum across the conditions, linked by increased levels of sleep instability, higher amounts of slow wave sleep and NREM/REM sleep imbalance. Sleep texture is extremely similar in the two conditions, although CAP metrics disclose quantitative differences. In particular, SHE patients show a higher arousal instability compared to DoA subjects. Given their clinical and epidemiological overlap, a common genetic background is also hypothesized. In such a perspective, we suggest that the consolidated dichotomy DoA vs. SHE should be reappraised.
- Published
- 2020
48. Copper deficiency-associated myelopathy in cryptogenic hyperzincemia: a case report
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Carlotta, Mutti, Veronica, Bazzurri, Elena, Tsantes, Erica, Curti, Liborio, Parrino, and Franco, Granella
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Adult ,copper ,zinc ,Humans ,Ataxia ,Female ,Case Report ,spine MRI ,posterior myelopathy ,Bone Marrow Diseases ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Spinal Cord Diseases - Abstract
Copper deficiency syndrome is an underestimated cause of posterior myelitis. We describe the case of a 41-year-old woman, who developed a subacute ataxic paraparesis associated with low back pain. Her 3T spine MRI showed a thin hyperintense FS-Echo T2 longitudinally extensive lesion involving the posterior columns of the cervical cord (from C2 to C6). An extensive diagnostic work-up excluded other causes of myelopathy and blood tests pointed out hypocupremia and mild hyperzincemia. Patients affected by this rare form of oligoelement deficiency typically develop progressive posterior column dysfunction with sensory ataxia and spasticity, sometimes associated with sensori-motor polyneuropathy. Clinical and radiological characteristics of posterior myelopathy due to copper deficiency are briefly reviewed. Physicians should be aware of this condition since a prompt introduction of copper supplementation can avoid progression of the neurological damage. (www.actabiomedica.it)
- Published
- 2020
49. The resilient brain and the guardians of sleep: New perspectives on old assumptions
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Liborio Parrino and Anna Elisabetta Vaudano
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Sleep Wake Disorders ,0301 basic medicine ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Polysomnography ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical functioning ,Physiology (medical) ,Neuroplasticity ,Homeostasis ,Humans ,Sleep Hygiene ,Circadian rhythm ,Resilience (network) ,Ultradian rhythm ,Neuronal Plasticity ,Modular structure ,Brain ,Criticality ,Small-World ,Sleep Microstructure ,Cyclic Alternating Pattern ,Sleep Dynamics ,Electroencephalography ,Human physiology ,Sleep in non-human animals ,030104 developmental biology ,Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,Arousal ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Resilience is the capacity of a system, enterprise or a person to maintain its core purpose and integrity in the face of dramatically changed circumstances. In human physiology, resilience is the capacity of adaptively overcoming stress and adversity while maintaining normal psychological and physical functioning. In this review, we investigate the resilient strategies of sleep. First, we discuss the concept of brain resilience, highlighting the modular structure of small-world networking, neuronal plasticity and critical brain behavior. Second, we explore the contribution of sleep to brain resilience listing the putative factors that impair sleep quality and predict susceptibility to sleep disorders. The third part details the manifold mechanisms acting as guardians of sleep, i.e., homeostatic, circadian and ultradian processes, sleep microstructure (K-complexes, delta bursts, arousals, cyclic alternating pattern, spindles), gravity, muscle tone and dreams. Mapping and pooling together the guardians of sleep in a dynamic integrated framework might lead towards an objective measure of sleep resilience and identify effective personalized strategies (biological, pharmacological, behavioral) to restore or protect the core properties of healthy sleep.
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- 2018
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50. Underestimated sleep breathing disorders in a cohort of patients admitted to post-COVID-19 follow-up program: A single center experience
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Irene Pollara, Clara Rapina, Liborio Parrino, Veronica Alfieri, Carlotta Mutti, Francesco Rausa, Marcello Luigi Salvatelli, Marco Cesare Angeli, Emanuela Burlone, Raffaele D’Ippolito, Marina Aiello, Elia Satta, Maria Majori, and Pier Anselmo Mori
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,Cohort ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Sleep (system call) ,business ,Single Center ,Article ,Breathing disorders - Published
- 2021
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