141 results on '"Paola Iannetti"'
Search Results
2. Peripheral nervous system involvement in SARS-CoV-2 infection: a review of the current pediatric literature
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Lorenzo Perilli, Marina Fetta, Martina Capponi, Cristiana Alessia Guido, Salvatore Grosso, Paola Iannetti, and Alberto Spalice
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SARS-CoV-2 ,peripheral nervous system diseases ,children ,complication ,cranial neuropathies ,Guillain-Barré syndrome ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) was identified as the pathogen responsible for the pandemic health emergency declared by the World Health Organization in March 2020. During the first part of the pandemic, adults showed mild to severe respiratory symptoms. Children seemed initially exempt, both from acute and subsequent complications. Hyposmia or anosmia were promptly identified as the main symptoms of acute infection, so neurotropism of SARS-CoV-2 was immediately suspected. (1, 2). As the emergency progressed, post infectious neurological complications were described also in pediatric population (3). Cases of cranial neuropathy in connection with acute SARS-CoV-2 infection have been reported in pediatric patients, as an isolate post infectious complication or in the context of the multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) (4–6). Neuroinflammation is thought to be caused by several mechanisms, among which immune/autoimmune reactions (7), but so far, no specific autoantibody has been identified. SARS-CoV-2 can enter the central nervous system (CNS) directly and/or infect it retrogradely, through the peripheral nervous system (PNS), after replicating peripherally; several factors regulate invasion and subsequent neuroinflammation. Indeed, direct/secondary entry and replication can activate CNS-resident immune cells that, together with peripheral leukocytes, induce an immune response and promote neuroinflammation. In addition, as we will discuss in the following review, many cases of peripheral neuropathy (cranial and non-cranial) have been reported during or after SARS-CoV-2 infection. However, some authors have pointed out that the increase of cranial roots and ganglia in neurological imaging is not always observed in children with cranial neuropathy. (8). Even if a variety of case reports were published, opinions about an increased incidence of such neurologic diseases, linked to SARS-CoV-2 infection, are still controversial (9–11). Facial nerve palsy, ocular movements abnormalities and vestibular alterations are among the most reported issues in pediatric population (3–5). Moreover, an increased screen exposure imposed by social distancing led to acute oculomotion’s disturbance in children, not primarily caused by neuritis (12, 13). The aim of this review is to suggest food for thought on the role of SARS-CoV-2 in neurological conditions, affecting the peripheral nervous system to optimize the management and care of pediatric patients.
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- 2023
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3. Acute Neurological Presentation in Children With SARS-CoV-2 Infection
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Antonella Riva, Gianluca Piccolo, Federica Balletti, Maria Binelli, Noemi Brolatti, Alberto Verrotti, Elisabetta Amadori, Alberto Spalice, Thea Giacomini, Maria Margherita Mancardi, Paola Iannetti, Maria Stella Vari, Emanuela Piccotti, Pasquale Striano, and Giacomo Brisca
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acute ,COVID-19 ,children ,neurological symptoms ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
BackgroundIn the pediatric population, the knowledge of the acute presentation of SARS-CoV-2 infection is mainly limited to small series and case reports, particularly when dealing with neurological symptoms. We describe a large cohort of children with acute SARS-CoV-2 infection, focusing on the neurological manifestations and investigating correlations between disease severity and population demographics.MethodsPatients aged 0–18 years with a positive molecular swab were recruited between April 2020 and March 2021 from a tertiary Italian pediatric centre. Clinical data, imaging, and laboratory test results were retrieved from our local dataset and statistically analyzed.ResultsA total of 237 patients with a median age of 3.2 years were eligible; thirty-two (13.5%) presented with neurological symptoms, including headache (65.6%), altered awareness (18.8%), ageusia/anosmia (12.5%), seizures (6.3%), and vertigo (6.3%), combined in 7 (21.9%) cases. Respiratory (59.5%) and gastrointestinal (25.3%) symptoms were the most common among the 205 (86.5%) patients without neurological involvement. Neurological symptoms did not significantly influence the severity of the triage access codes. Moreover, pre-existing medical conditions were not higher in the group with neurological manifestations. Overall, fifty-nine patients (25%, 14/59 with neurological symptoms) required treatment, being antibiotics, systemic steroids, and heparin those most prescribed.ConclusionOur study supports the overall benign course of the SARS-CoV-2 infection in children. Neurological manifestations, except for headache, remain a rare presenting symptom, and disease severity seems unrelated to pre-existing medical conditions.
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- 2022
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4. Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase homozygous mutation in a young boy with cerebellar infarction
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Alberto Spalice, Francesca Del Balzo, Francesco Massimo Perla, Enrico Properzi, Carla Carducci, Italo Antonozzi, and Paola Iannetti
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Medicine ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Posterior circulation vascular occlusive disease in children is a rare and uncommonly reported event. Among the numerous risk factors, the methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) mutation is considered to be a common genetic cause of thrombosis in adults and children. Recently, a link between the MTHFR mutation and cerebrovascular disorders was reported in children. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is a great improvement on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), making the in vivo anatomical and pathological study of the brain and its fibers possible. In our patient cerebellar infarction was associated with MTHFR mutation and, in a standard neurological examination, DTI revealed normal white matter tracts.
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- 2009
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5. Definitive pathognomonic signs and symptoms of paediatric neurological COVID‐19 are still emerging
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Paola Iannetti, Alberto Verrotti, and Chiara Mazzocchetti
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Adult ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Mini Review ,Central nervous system ,Signs and symptoms ,Disease ,neurological involvement ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pathognomonic ,030225 pediatrics ,Pandemic ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Pandemics ,multisystem inflammatory syndrome ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,electroencephalogram ,central nervous system ,medicine.disease ,Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,epilepsy ,Kawasaki disease ,business - Abstract
Children with COVID‐19 tend to show milder symptoms than adults during the pandemic, but growing evidence of neurological involvement has emerged. Some studies have reported neurological symptoms in children with COVID‐19, which include multisystem inflammatory syndrome, a disease that shares some, but not all, of the characteristics of Kawasaki disease. This review presents, and discusses, the evidence to date. Our initial findings suggest that neurological manifestations can be considered to be the direct result of central nervous system viral invasion or post‐infection immuno‐mediated disease.
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- 2021
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6. Microbiota-gut brain axis involvement in neuropsychiatric disorders
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Hervé M. Blottière, Emilio Russo, Sigrid Pedersen, Francesca Ronchi, Luigi Francesco Iannone, Gaia Luongo, Federico Zara, Cinzia Ferraris, P. Mainardi, Anna Tagliabue, Alberto Preda, Gerard Clarke, Kaja Kristine Selmer, Elisa Santocchi, Stefania Provasi, Vincenzo Belcastro, Carmen Giordano, Alberto Verrotti, Pietro Baldelli, Carlo Minetti, Rita Citraro, Diego Albani, Pasquale Striano, Andrea Petretto, Paola Iannetti, Marco Carotenuto, Jakob Zimmermann, Nicola Segata, Annamaria Cattaneo, Alberto Spalice, Letizia Guiducci, Sanjay M. Sisodiya, Iannone, Luigi Francesco, Preda, Alberto, Blottière, Hervé M, Clarke, Gerard, Albani, Diego, Belcastro, Vincenzo, Carotenuto, Marco, Cattaneo, Annamaria, Citraro, Rita, Ferraris, Cinzia, Ronchi, Francesca, Luongo, Gaia, Santocchi, Elisa, Guiducci, Letizia, Baldelli, Pietro, Iannetti, Paola, Pedersen, Sigrid, Petretto, Andrea, Provasi, Stefania, Selmer, Kaja, Spalice, Alberto, Tagliabue, Anna, Verrotti, Alberto, Segata, Nicola, Zimmermann, Jakob, Minetti, Carlo, Mainardi, Paolo, Giordano, Carmen, Sisodiya, Sanjay, Zara, Federico, Russo, Emilio, Striano, Pasquale, University of Catanzaro, University of Genoa (UNIGE), MICrobiologie de l'ALImentation au Service de la Santé (MICALIS), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-AgroParisTech, University College Cork (UCC), IRCCS - Istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche 'Mario Negri', Saint Anna Hospital, Partenaires INRAE, Università degli studi della Campania 'Luigi Vanvitelli', King's College, University of Pavia, University of Bern, Ordine dei Tecnologi Alimentari Campania e Lazio, Stella Maris Foundation, Institute of Clinical Physiology, National Council of Research, University of Genova, Università degli Studi di Roma 'La Sapienza' = Sapienza University [Rome], Oslo University Hospital [Oslo], Istituto Giannina Gaslini, University of Laquila, University of Trento, Kolfarma SRL, Department of Chemistry, Materials and Chemical Engineering 'Giulio Natta' (CMIC), Politecnico di Milano [Milan] (POLIMI), Department of Clinical and Experimental Epilepsy, and UCL Institute of Neurology
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microbiota-gut brain axis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Central nervous system ,Gut–brain axis ,Inflammation ,Bidirectional communication ,digestive system ,03 medical and health sciences ,fluids and secretions ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ketogenic diet ,inflammation ,manipulating microbiota ,metabolomics ,neuropsychiatric disorders ,Central Nervous System Diseases ,medicine ,microbiota-gut brain axi ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Ketogenic diet, inflammation, manipulating microbiota, metabolomics, microbiota-gut brain axis, neuropsychiatric disorders ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Multiple sclerosis ,Mental Disorders ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,030227 psychiatry ,Clinical neurology ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,stomatognathic diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Clinical evidence ,Immunology ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,metabolomic - Abstract
International audience; Introduction: The microbiota-gut brain (MGB) axis is the bidirectional communication between the intestinal microbiota and the brain. An increasing body of preclinical and clinical evidence has revealed that the gut microbial ecosystem can affect neuropsychiatric health. However, there is still a need of further studies to elucidate the complex gene-environment interactions and the role of the MGB axis in neuropsychiatric diseases, with the aim of identifying biomarkers and new therapeutic targets, to allow early diagnosis and improving treatments. Areas covered: To review the role of MGB axis in neuropsychiatric disorders, prediction and prevention of disease through exploitation, integration, and combination of data from existing gut microbiome/microbiota projects and appropriate other International '-Omics' studies. The authors also evaluated the new technological advances to investigate and modulate, through nutritional and other interventions, the gut microbiota. Expert opinion: The clinical studies have documented an association between alterations in gut microbiota composition and/or function, whereas the preclinical studies support a role for the gut microbiota in impacting behaviors which are of relevance to psychiatry and other central nervous system (CNS) disorders. Targeting MGB axis could be an additional approach for treating CNS disorders and all conditions in which alterations of the gut microbiota are involved.
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- 2019
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7. The possible use of the L-type calcium channel antagonist verapamil in drug-resistant epilepsy
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Paola Iannetti, Umberto Raucci, Alberto Spalice, Pasquale Parisi, and Francesco Nicita
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0301 basic medicine ,Drug Resistant Epilepsy ,multidrug transporters ,verapamil ,Status epilepticus ,Pharmacology ,Blood–brain barrier ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Dravet syndrome ,p-glycoprotein ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,seizures ,P-glycoprotein ,biology ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Calcium channel ,blood-brain barrier ,epilepsy ,medicine.disease ,Treatment Outcome ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Models, Animal ,biology.protein ,Verapamil ,Anticonvulsants ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Multidrug transporters (MDTs) are likely to play a role in the pathogenesis of drug resistance in epilepsy, acting at the level of the blood-brain barrier by returning antiepileptic drugs to the blood vessels and lowering brain penetration and concentration (e.g. the so-called multidrug transporter hypothesis). In the last ten years experimental studies on both animal models and human brain tissues have highlighted a potential role of the P-glycoprotein-one of the multidrug transporters of the blood-brain barrier-in the pathophysiology of drug-resistant epilepsies. At the same time, verapamil has been administered to patients with drug-resistant epilepsy (e.g., Dravet syndrome, Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, focal epilepsies) or status epilepticus with promising results. In this drug profile paper the authors review current knowledge and main published studies regarding the role of the L-type calcium channel antagonist verapamil in drug-resistant epilepsy.
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- 2015
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8. Neurocardiogenic Syncope and Epilepsy in Pediatric Age
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Rosanna Mariani, Laura Papetti, Fabiana Ursitti, Paola Iannetti, and Mario Mastrangelo
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medicine.medical_specialty ,head-up tilt table testing ,Adolescent ,neurocardiogenic syncope ,Neurological disorder ,eeg-ecg holter ,Electroencephalography ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Epilepsy ,Intensive care ,Internal medicine ,Syncope, Vasovagal ,Humans ,Medicine ,Medical history ,cardiovascular diseases ,Diagnostic Errors ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,epilepsy ,Infant ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Epilepsy in children ,Anesthesia ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Electrocardiography, Ambulatory ,Emergency Medicine ,Cardiology ,Female ,business ,Electrocardiography ,Syncope (phonology) - Abstract
Neurocardiogenic syncope is induced by a hyperrecruitment of parasympathetic nerve tone elicited by emotional stress or pain. The presence of a transient loss of consciousness associated with involuntary motor activity or with urinary incontinence and the misinterpretation of anamnestic data or of electroencephalogram (EEG) abnormalities often leads to wrong diagnosis of epilepsy in children with this disorder.Careful and systematic history taking, pressure measurement, electrocardiogram (ECG), and, in selected cases, head-up tilt table testing are generally enough to rule out a cardiogenic or a neurocardiogenic syncope. Simultaneous EEG-ECG Holter represents a useful instrument for differential diagnosis between neurocardiogenic syncope and epilepsy.We report 3 case reports to demonstrate how simultaneous EEG-ECG Holter can contribute to characterize functional heart-brain interactions and the exact sequence of the physiopathologic events leading to the loss of consciousness in cases in which the clinical borders with epileptic disorders are particularly subtle.
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- 2011
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9. 'Epileptic Encephalopathy' of Infancy and Childhood: Electro-Clinical Pictures and Recent Understandings
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Alberto Verrotti, Maria Pia Villa, Paola Iannetti, Laura Papetti, Alberto Spalice, Fabiana Ursitti, Pasquale Parisi, and Francesco Nicita
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Pharmacology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Epileptic encephalopathy ,Cognition ,General Medicine ,Audiology ,Electroencephalography ,medicine.disease ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Epilepsy ,Neurology ,medicine ,Cognitive deterioration ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Ictal ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology ,Psychiatry ,Subclinical infection - Abstract
There is growing interest in the diagnosis of cognitive impairment among children with epilepsy. It is well known that status of seizures control has to be carefully investigated because it can be sufficient “per se” to cause progressive mental deterioration conditions. Subclinical electroencephalographic discharges may have subtle effects on cognition, learning and sleep patterns, even in the absence of clinical or sub-clinical seizures. In this respect, electroencephalographic monitoring (long-term and nocturnal recording) and in particular an all night video-polysomnography (V-NPSG) record can be crucial to detect the presence of unrecognized seizures and/or an inter-ictal nocturnal EEG discharge increasing. Epileptic encephalopathies (EE) are a group of conditions in which the higher cognitive functions are deteriorate as a consequence of epileptic activity, which, in fact, consists of frequent seizures and/or florid and prolonged interictal paroxysmal discharges, focal or generalized. AEDs represent the first line in opposing the burden of both, the poor seizures control and the poor interictal discharges control, in the cognitive deterioration of EE affected children. Thus, to improve the long-term cognitive/behavioural prognosis in these refractory epileptic children, it should be taken into account both a good seizures control and a strict sleep control, choosing carefully antiepileptic drugs which are able to control not only seizures clinically recognizable but even the EEG discharges onset and its increasing and spreading during sleep. Here, we review the efficacy and safety of the newer AEDs that, to date, are used in the treatment of EE in infancy and childhood.
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- 2010
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10. Infantile spasms in the setting of Sturge–Weber syndrome
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Martino Ruggieri, Gemma Incorpora, Massimo Barbagallo, Lorenzo Pavone, Piero Pavone, Agata Polizzi, Caterina Nucifora, Andrea D. Praticò, Paola Iannetti, and Alberto Spalice
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Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sturge–Weber syndrome ,Severity of Illness Index ,Epilepsy ,Sturge-Weber Syndrome ,Severity of illness ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,business.industry ,musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology ,Infant ,Electroencephalography ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,body regions ,Natural history ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosurgery ,business ,Spasms, Infantile ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The prevalence and outcome of the most frequent type of epilepsy in infancy-infantile spasms (IS)-are well characterized in the setting of most neurocutaneous disorders. By contrast, still there is no study describing the natural history of IS in the setting of Sturge-Weber syndrome (SWS). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Two patients with SWS and IS were identified in our series and five in the literature. The aim of study is to evaluate the clinical, electroencephalographic (EEG) and imaging features of our cases and to compare our cases with those described in the literature. IS in the setting of SWS is an uncommon but possible event (2/19 patients seen over 13 years in our institutions). RESULTS: We confirmed the correlation between IS and severity of SWS cutaneous and neural (extension of leptomeningeal capillary malformation) phenotype. IS in SWS seems to be atypical both from a clinical viewpoint (they are asymmetric) and from a laboratory viewpoint (EEG is not classically hypsarrhythmic).
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- 2008
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11. Early-onset Hereditary Neuropathy with Liability to Pressure Palsy
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Giovanni Antonini, Gian Maria Fabrizi, S. Di. Netta, F. Taioli, Mario Mastrangelo, Paola Iannetti, G. L. Ciambra, and A. Luchetti
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,delezione 17p11.2 ,Neural Conduction ,Clinical onset ,Humans ,Paralysis ,Medicine ,Age of Onset ,Neuropatia ereditaria ,HNPP ,Early onset ,Palsy ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,children peripheral myelin protein 22 (pmp22) ,hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (hnpp) ,tomaculous neuropathy ,Surgery ,El Niño ,Child, Preschool ,Tomaculous neuropathy ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Neurology (clinical) ,Hereditary Sensory and Motor Neuropathy ,business ,Myelin Proteins - Abstract
The clinical onset of hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsy (HNPP) in childhood is rarely reported. On the basis of a 5-year-old affected patient, we reviewed the cases reported in the literature to evaluate the clinical and genetic characteristics of patients with an early onset (
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- 2007
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12. Efficacy and safety of levetiracetam: An add-on trial in children with refractory epilepsy
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Duccio Maria Cordelli, Antonio Pascotto, Valentina Marchiani, Emilio Franzoni, Giangennaro Coppola, Alberto Verrotti, Salvatore Grosso, B. Acampora, Paola Iannetti, Paolo Balestri, Alberto Spalice, Guido Morgese, Grosso, S, Franzoni, E, Coppola, G, Iannetti, P, Verrotti, A, Cordelli, Dm, Marchiani, V, Pascotto, Antonio, Spalice, A, Acampora, B, Morgese, G, Balestri, P., GROSSO S, FRANZONI E., COPPOLA G, IANNETTI P, VERROTTI A, CORDELLI DM, MARCHIANI V, PASCOTTO A, SPALICE A, ACAMPORA B, MORGESE G, and BALESTRI P.
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Male ,Pediatrics ,Psychology (all) ,FARMACORESISTENZA ,levetiracetam ,antiepileptic drug ,drug resistant epilepsy ,epilepsy syndromes ,Epilepsy ,Prospective Studies ,Neurologic Examination ,Electroencephalography ,General Medicine ,Perinatology and Child Health ,Treatment Outcome ,Neurology ,Anesthesia ,Combination ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,ETÀ EVOLUTIVA ,Anticonvulsants ,Female ,Levetiracetam ,Drug ,medicine.symptom ,medicine.drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Clinical Neurology ,EPILESSIA ,Antiepileptic drug ,Drug resistant epilepsy ,Epilepsy syndromes ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Infant ,Piracetam ,Retrospective Studies ,Drug Evaluation ,Neurology (clinical) ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Irritability ,Dose-Response Relationship ,Drug Therapy ,medicine ,Generalized epilepsy ,Adverse effect ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Drug Resistant Epilepsy ,Clinical trial ,business - Abstract
SummaryThe aim of this multicentric, prospective and uncontrolled study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of levetiracetam in 110 children with refractory epilepsy, of whom 21 were less than 4 years old. After a median follow-up period of 7 months, levetiracetam administration was effective (responders with >50% decrease in seizure frequency) in 39% of children, of whom 10 (9%) became seizure-free. The efficacy was higher in patients with localization-related epilepsy (58% of responders) than in those with generalized epilepsy (37% of responders). Levetiracetam was well tolerated. The main side effects of somnolence and irritability occurred in 14% of patients. In one patient acute choreoathetosis occurred after few doses of levetiracetam. Overall, the adverse effects were not severe. Children younger than 4 years were particularly tolerant. In conclusion, the present study confirms that levetiracetam is effective and well tolerated as an add-on treatment in children with refractory epilepsy. Our preliminary data also indicate that levetiracetam may be a valid therapeutic option for epilepsy in infants and young children.
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- 2005
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13. Multiple sclerosis in children under 10 years of age
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Luigi M.E. Grimaldi, Agata Polizzi, Martino Ruggieri, Paola Iannetti, and Lorenzo Pavone
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Neurology ,Adolescent ,Population ,MEDLINE ,Dermatology ,Disease ,Sex Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Age of Onset ,Child ,education ,Neuroradiology ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Multiple sclerosis ,Age Factors ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Review Literature as Topic ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neurosurgery ,Age of onset ,Peptides ,business - Abstract
Despite the consistent amount of information accumulated in recent years on multiple sclerosis (MS) in childhood, many clinicians still view this condition as an exclusively young adult-onset disease and do not consider that it may occur and manifest even during infancy and pre-school age, suggesting that the number of MS cases in the paediatric age group may have been underestimated. Thus, the need to have practical parameters for therapeutic, counselling and educational purposes in such settings as caring for patients whose onset of disease is at very early ages may increasingly arise for practising clinicians. In addition, the clinical and radiographic criteria for the diagnosis of MS have not been validated in a paediatric MS population; accordingly, inclusion age at onset (such as for research purposes) is generally over 10 years. To highlight the peculiarities that characterise MS when it begins at this young age we have reviewed the literature and summarised our preliminary results with the national registry of the Italian Society of Paediatric Neurology (SINP) Study Group on Childhood MS in the group of MS patients with the earliest onset of disease (i.e.
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- 2004
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14. Ophthalmological manifestations in segmental neurofibromatosis type 1
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M Di Pietro, Paola Iannetti, Piero Pavone, A. L. Gabriele, Antonino Scuderi, Agata Polizzi, Alberto Spalice, and Martino Ruggieri
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Adult ,Male ,congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Neurofibromatosis 1 ,Visual acuity ,Adolescent ,Eye Diseases ,genetic structures ,Visual Acuity ,Gene mutation ,Clinical Science - Extended Reports ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Café au lait spot ,medicine ,Humans ,Neurofibromatosis ,Hypertelorism ,Child ,neoplasms ,Pigmentation disorder ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Optic Nerve Neoplasms ,Infant ,Glioma ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Dermatology ,Optic Nerve Neoplasm ,eye diseases ,Sensory Systems ,nervous system diseases ,Ophthalmology ,Eye examination ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Pigmentation Disorders - Abstract
Aims: To study the ophthalmological manifestations in individuals with the typical features of neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) circumscribed to one or more body segments, usually referred to as segmental NF1. Methods: Visual acuity and colour tests, visual field examination, slit lamp biomicroscopy of the anterior segment, and a detailed examination of the retina by indirect ophthalmoscopy were performed at diagnosis and follow up in 72 consecutive subjects (29 males, 43 females; aged 1–64 years; mean age 14.6 years) seen at the university departments of paediatrics in Catania and Rome, Italy, during years 1990–2003, who had in restricted body areas: (1) typical pigmentary manifestations of NF1 (cafe au lait spots and freckling) only (n = 48); (2) NF1 pigmentary manifestations and neurofibromas alone (n = 2); (3) neurofibromas only (n = 15); and (4) plexiform neurofibromas only (n = 7). Results: None of the 72 patients had Lisch nodules in the iris irrespective of age at eye examination or hypertelorism (a “minor” NF1 feature) and none developed typical associated ophthalmological NF1 complications. An additional child had an isolated optic pathways glioma (OPG), which behaved both biologically and radiographically as an NF1 associated OPG. Conclusions: This represents the first systematic study reporting on eye involvement in the largest series of individuals at different ages having segmental NF1. As one of the postulated mechanisms to explain segmental NF1 is somatic mosaicism for the NF1 gene (so far demonstrated only in two patients) the present findings could be explained either by the fact that the eye is too far from the mutated area with NF1 lesions in most cases or by the NF1 (or other “predisposing” or “cooperating”) gene mutation restricted to too few cellular clones or to tissues embryologically different from the eye.
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- 2004
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15. Convulsive disorder and the genetics of signal transduction; a study of a low molecular weight protein tyrosine phosphatase in a pediatric sample
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Nunzio Bottini, Paola Iannetti, Nazareno Lucarini, Paolo Curatolo, Fulvia Gloria-Bottini, Paola Lucarelli, Antonella Piciullo, and Patrizia Saccucci
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Male ,Protein tyrosine phosphatase ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases ,Isoenzymes ,Alleles ,Middle Aged ,Infant ,Female ,Child, Preschool ,Phenotype ,Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 2 ,Epilepsy, Generalized ,Humans ,Gene Frequency ,Signal Transduction ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins ,Child ,Seizures, Febrile ,Adult ,Febrile ,Epilepsy ,Convulsion ,education.field_of_study ,Kinase ,General Neuroscience ,Pair 2 ,medicine.symptom ,Signal transduction ,Human ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Phosphatase ,Population ,Biology ,Chromosomes ,Settore MED/01 - Statistica Medica ,Seizures ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Polymorphism ,Preschool ,education ,Generalized ,Acid phosphatase ,medicine.disease ,Restriction Fragment Length ,Endocrinology ,biology.protein - Abstract
Recent studies point to an involvement of kinases and phosphatases in ionic channel regulation and in physiopathologic mechanisms leading to convulsive disorders. Acid phosphatase locus 1 (ACP1), also named cytosolic low molecular weight phosphotyrosine phosphatase, is a highly polymorphic phosphatase that is especially abundant in the central nervous system and is known to be involved in several signal transduction pathways. We studied ACP1 in 122 children with idiopathic generalized tonic-clonic seizures, 80 children with febrile convulsions, and 417 controls from the population of Rome. Low activity phenotypes of ACP1 (*A/*A and *A/*B) were found to be over-represented while high activity phenotypes (*C/*C and *B/*C) were under-represented in generalized seizures cases compared to controls (P < 0.005). No significant difference was observed between febrile convulsion cases and controls. These observations suggest a protective role of the high activity ACP1 phenotypes against seizures in children.
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- 2002
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16. Periventricular Nodular Heterotopia: Report of a Pediatric Series
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Maria Paola Pascali, Alberto Spalice, Francesco Massimo Perla, Grazia Taddeucci, and Paola Iannetti
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Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Filamins ,Choristoma ,Cerebral Ventricles ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,Contractile Proteins ,0302 clinical medicine ,Intellectual Disability ,030225 pediatrics ,Female patient ,medicine ,Humans ,Abnormalities, Multiple ,In patient ,Child ,Neurologic Examination ,Brain Diseases ,business.industry ,Microfilament Proteins ,Periventricular Nodular Heterotopia ,Normal intelligence ,Cortical malformations ,Electroencephalography ,Common denominator ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male patient ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Periventricular nodular heterotopia is a malformation that occurs in both males and females and is associated with a variety of clinical and neuroradiologic signs. A gene called filamin-1 (FLN-1) has recently been identified. We review the clinical and imaging fmdings from a series of pediatric patients with periventricular nodular heterotopia. Five patients (three males and two females; age range = 4-18 years) were investigated. In our series, periventricular nodular heterotopia can be the common denominator in different conditions. Periventricular nodular heterotopia can occur alone or be associated with cortical malformations. Epilepsy was present in three of the five patients and was resistant to drugs in one female. Mental retardation was present in three of the five patients. Two male patients had normal intelligence, with no cortical anomalies; patient 3 had unilateral periventricular nodular heterotopia. The associated malformations were more severe in the female patients and slight only in patient 1. The two females showed anomalies rarely reported in association with bilateral periventricular nodular heterotopia. We believe that other genes can be involved in children with atypical neuroradiologic periventricular nodular heterotopia. No mutations were detected in 6 of the 48 exons of the FLN-1 gene, although this does not allow any definitive conclusions to be reached. We conclude that our series of patients with periventricular nodular heterotopia clearly highlights the complexity of the clinical, neurologic, and neuroradiologic characteristics associated with this malformation. (J Child Neurol 2002;17:300-304).
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- 2002
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17. Seizures in paediatric Chiari type I malformation: the role of singlephoton emission computed tomography
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C. De Felice Ciccoli, Oliviero Bruni, Anna Festa, Carlo Ludovico Maini, Alberto Spalice, and Paola Iannetti
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Adolescent ,Posterior fossa ,Electroencephalography ,Single-photon emission computed tomography ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Cohort Studies ,Epilepsy ,Seizures ,medicine ,Humans ,Ictal ,Brain magnetic resonance imaging ,Child ,Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Chiari type i malformation ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Arnold-Chiari Malformation ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Radiology ,business ,Perfusion - Abstract
UNLABELLED Chiari type I malformation is one of the posterior fossa maldevelopments with which different clinical manifestations have been associated. Seizures have only recently been associated with Chiari type I malformation. This study reports on 4 children with epilepsy (2M, 2F; age range 8-15 y) diagnosed with Chiari type I malformation by brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), in whom no cortical structural involvement was observed. In these patients an interictal ethylcysteinate-dimer-single-photon emission computed tomographic (ECD-SPECT) study was performed to define more precisely the relationship between Chiari type I malformation and seizures. In these patients the hypoperfusion area correlated with electroencephalographic (EEG) focal abnormalities. These hypoperfusions may represent the functional aspect of a cerebral microdysgenesis; seizures and EEG epileptic anomalies may also be linked to the complex network connection between cortices and cerebellar hemispheres. A cerebellar hypoperfusion was also detected in two of the four examined patients, indicating a functional or structural involvement. CONCLUSION Interictal SPECT scans are helpful for the clarification of seizures in patients with Chiari type I malformation.
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- 2002
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18. Paroxysmal Tonic Upgaze: Physiopathological Considerations in Three Additional Cases
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Paola Iannetti, Alberto Spalice, and Pasquale Parisi
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ataxia ,Cerebellar Ataxia ,benign epilepsy ,Audiology ,Electroencephalography ,Pineal Gland ,Syncope ,03 medical and health sciences ,Muscle tone ,Ocular Motility Disorders ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Periaqueductal Gray ,Language Development Disorders ,Language disorder ,EEG ,paroxysmal tonic upgaze ,MRI ,electro-clinical features ,Child ,Cerebral Cortex ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Brain Neoplasms ,Eye movement ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Gait ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Child, Preschool ,Muscle Tonus ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Cardiology ,Pinealoma ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Paroxysmal tonic upgaze of childhood has been described as a benign distinctive syndrome of abnormal ocular movement, with or without concomitant ataxia. After the first observation of four children, a further 29 patients have been reported with a wide spectrum of neurologic abnormalities such as ataxia, unsteady of gait, learning disabilities and mental retardation at follow-up. Electroencephalograms were normal in all the subjects and magnetic resonance imaging showed deficient myelination in only one patient. Recently it has been suggested that paroxysmal tonic upgaze could be a heterogeneous syndrome, ranging from a simply age-dependent manifestation to a clinical appearance of a variety of disorders affecting the corticomesencephalic loop of vertical eye movement. Moreover, it also could be an early sign of more widespread neurologic dysfunction. We describe three patients who presented paroxysmal tonic upgaze; in one, ataxia was present; in the second child, ataxia and language disorder also were observed; and in the third patient paroxysmal tonic upgaze was associated with loss of muscle tone (drop-attack-like events). On magnetic resonance imaging, a pinealoma compressing the dorsal mesencephalic region was detected. On the basis of our observations, we suggest that any insult with periaqueductal mesencephalic gray-matter involvement could be considered the basic condition for this peculiar clinical manifestation. (J Child Neurol 2000;15:15-18).
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- 2000
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19. Residual and Persistent Adie's Pupil After Pediatric Ophthalmoplegic Migraine
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Pasquale Parisi, Alberto Verrotti, Ludovico Iannetti, Paola Iannetti, and Alberto Spalice
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Analgesics, Non-Narcotic ,Child ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Ibuprofen ,Migraine with Aura ,Miotics ,Photic Stimulation ,Pilocarpine ,Pupil ,Tonic Pupil ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Neurology ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Aura ,Eye disease ,ophthalmoplegic migraines ,Adie’s pupil ,Pediatrics ,Central nervous system disease ,Ophthalmology ,Non-Narcotic ,Ophthalmoplegic Migraine ,medicine ,Analgesics ,Tonic pupil ,business.industry ,Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Migraine with aura ,Surgery ,Migraine ,sense organs ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
We report on a 9-year-old girl diagnosed with ophthalmoplegic migraines who had been previously diagnosed, at age 7 years, with typical migraines with aura. After resolution of the third ophthalmoplegic migraine attack, the only evident residual clinical sign was Adie's pupil. During 24-month follow-up, at age 11 years, a neurologic examination produced completely normal results. However, Adie's pupil persisted. Adie's tonic pupil can be associated with extraocular diseases, which were all excluded in this patient. The mechanisms underlying tonic pupil are not fully understood. This is the first report, to the best of our knowledge, of an ophthalmoplegic migraine followed by persistent Adie's pupil. Possible pathogenic mechanisms are discussed.
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- 2009
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20. Calcium-channel Blocker Verapamil Administration in Prolonged and Refractory Status Epilepticus
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Pasquale Parisi, Paola Iannetti, and Alberto Spalice
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Male ,medicine.drug_class ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Calcium channel blocker ,Status epilepticus ,Pharmacology ,Antiarrhythmic agent ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Epilepsy ,Status Epilepticus ,p-glycoprotein ,medicine ,Humans ,Drug Interactions ,Channel blocker ,ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B, Member 1 ,Child ,Infusions, Intravenous ,calcium ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,business.industry ,Electroencephalography ,Calcium Channel Blockers ,medicine.disease ,channel blocker ,Treatment Outcome ,Anticonvulsant ,Verapamil ,Neurology ,Blood-Brain Barrier ,Anesthesia ,Acute Disease ,cardiovascular system ,status epilepticus ,Anticonvulsants ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Neurology (clinical) ,Supraventricular tachycardia ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We report on an 11-year healthy boy who presented refractory status epilepticus (SE), which was unresponsive to conventional antiepileptic drugs used in the algorithm of the treatment of SE. Based on evidence that verapamil has anticonvulsant activity in animal models and the fact that the boy had a supraventricular tachycardia (140-160 b/min), i.v. verapamil (0.034 mg/min) was administered on day 37, and after a 3.125 mg cumulative verapamil dose (1.5 hour after initiation of the infusion), the patient regained consciousness was able to breathe spontaneously and the electrical SE promptly disappeared. The apparent dramatic response to i.v. verapamil may be explained by its direct anticonvulsant action on the basis of the potential involvement of calcium channels in epileptic activity and that verapamil, a known Pgp inhibitor in the cerebrovascular endothelium in the epilepticus focus, acted by facilitating the brain penetration of the antiepileptic drugs that our patient was receiving simultaneously.
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- 2005
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21. Efficacy of verapamil as an adjunctive treatment in children with drug-resistant epilepsy: a pilot study
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Pasquale Parisi, Laura Papetti, Francesco Nicita, Alberto Spalice, Paola Iannetti, and Marina Nikanorova
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Male ,Adolescent ,medicine.drug_class ,Clinical Neurology ,Drug Resistance ,Pilot Projects ,Calcium channel blocker ,Status epilepticus ,P-glycoprotein ,Blood–brain barrier ,Epilepsy ,Dravet syndrome ,medicine ,Humans ,SCN1A ,Child ,Blood-brain barrier ,Drug-resistance ,business.industry ,Calcium channel ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Drug Resistant Epilepsy ,Treatment Outcome ,Neurology ,Verapamil ,Anesthesia ,Child, Preschool ,Adjunctive treatment ,Multidrug transporters ,Anticonvulsants ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,epilepsy ,p-glycoprotein ,blood-brain barrier ,drug-resistance ,verapamil ,multidrug transporters ,scn1a ,dravet syndrome ,smei ,medicine.drug ,SMEI ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Purpose Verapamil, a voltage-gated calcium channel blocker, has been occasionally reported to have some effect on reducing seizure frequency in drug-resistant epilepsy or status epilepticus. We aimed to investigate the efficacy of verapamil as add-on treatment in children with drug-resistant epilepsy. Methods Seven children with drug-resistant structural-metabolic, unknown or genetic ( e.g. , Dravet syndrome [DS]) epilepsy received verapamil as an add-on drug to baseline antiepileptic therapy. Verapamil was slowly introduced at the dosage of 1mg/kg/day and titrated up to 1.5mg/kg/day. After completing the titration period, patients entered a 14-month maintenance period and were followed up at 3, 8, and 14 months. Heart monitoring was performed at baseline and at each follow-up. The primary outcome measure was the response of seizures to verapamil. Results Three subjects with genetically determined DS showed a partial (reduction of 50–99%) response for all types of seizures. A patient with DS without known mutation showed a partial control of all types of seizures in the first 13 months; then seizures worsened and verapamil was suspended. Two patients with structural epilepsy and one with Lennox–Gastaut syndrome showed no improvement. Any side effects were recorded. Conclusions Add-on treatment with verapamil seems to have some effect in controlling seizures in patients with genetically determined DS. Our observations justify further research on the relationship between calcium channels, calcium channel blockers, and channelopathies.
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- 2013
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22. Immunologic Aspects of Vigabatrin Treatment in Epileptic Children
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Carlo Imperato, Paola Iannetti, Umberto Raucci, Piergiorgio Zuccaro, and Roberta Pacifici
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Cytotoxicity, Immunologic ,Male ,Lymphocyte ,CD3 ,CD4-CD8 Ratio ,Peripheral blood mononuclear cell ,Vigabatrin ,Immune system ,Humans ,Medicine ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Child ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,Whole blood ,Immunity, Cellular ,Epilepsy ,biology ,business.industry ,Infant ,Lymphocyte Subsets ,Killer Cells, Natural ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Child, Preschool ,Immunoglobulin G ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Anticonvulsants ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Antibody ,business ,CD8 - Abstract
Vigabatrin (VGB) is an antiepileptic drug (AED) that acts by irreversibly inhibiting gamma-aminobutyric acid transaminase (GABA-T). To evaluate immune responses to GVG, we studied 29 idiopathic or symptomatic epileptic children and also examined a control group (n = 15). Epileptic children were tested before and after 1 and 3 months of VGB treatment. Whole blood was used to connect subsets with commercial monoclonal antibodies. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were used to assess natural killer (NK) cell activity and lymphocyte response to phytohemagglutinin (PHA) and concavalin A (Con A). Immunoglobulin (Ig) levels were tested in serum. At baseline, no immunologic abnormalities were observed in either control or treated patients. During treatment, the percentage and absolute number of B lymphocytes, serum concentration of Ig, number of T total mature lymphocytes (CD3), T-rosetting lymphocytes (CD11), T-helper cells (CD4), and mitogenic response of lymphocytes remained unchanged. Several other immunologic responses showed a statistically significant increase after 1 and 3 months of VGB treatment, however, including the percentage and absolute number of T-suppressor cells (CD8) and NK cells and NK cell activity. The correlation between number of NK cells and NK cell activity was significant. Data obtained demonstrated that VGB may interfere with the modulation of the immune system, especially cytotoxic cell populations.
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- 1995
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23. Bilateral middle cerebral artery thromboembolic occlusion. Could maternal hyperthermia be a detrimental factor?
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Francesca Del Balzo, Laura Papetti, Francesco Nicita, Alberto Spalice, Paola Iannetti, Fabiana Ursitti, and Guglielmo Salvatori
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Microcephaly ,Wallerian degeneration ,Fever ,Cerebral arteries ,Corpus callosum ,Pregnancy ,medicine.artery ,Thromboembolism ,Occlusion ,medicine ,Humans ,Abnormalities, Multiple ,Child ,Cerebral Arterial Diseases ,Female ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Medicine (all) ,business.industry ,Cerebral peduncle ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Hypoplasia ,Anesthesia ,Middle cerebral artery ,Abnormalities ,business ,Multiple - Abstract
We describe a six-month-old girl with microcephaly, developmental delay, truncal hypotonia, left pyramidal signs, partial seizures and myoclonic spasms, born to a feverish mother. MRI showed bilateral vascular lesions in the territory of the middle cerebral arteries, prevalent in the right hemisphere, together with hypoplasia of the posterior part of the corpus callosum and Wallerian degeneration of the cerebral peduncle. There may be many reasons for these lesions. In the reported patient the presence of maternal hyperthermia could have exacerbated cerebral thromboembolic occlusion.
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- 2011
24. Peri-ictal and inter-ictal headache in children and adolescents with idiopathic epilepsy: a multicenter cross-sectional study
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Pasquale Parisi, Alberto Verrotti, Alberto Spalice, Elisabetta Tozzi, Maria Pia Villa, Giangennaro Coppola, Alessia Di Fonzo, Paola Iannetti, and Raffaella Bruschi
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Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Aura ,pre-ictal headache ,Migraine Disorders ,Population ,peri-ictal headache ,idiopathic epilepsy ,Comorbidity ,Epilepsy ,medicine ,Ictal headache ,Humans ,migraine ,Ictal ,Child ,education ,education.field_of_study ,post-ictal headache ,business.industry ,Peri-ictal headache . Pre-ictal headache ,Headache ,tension-type headache ,headache ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,nervous system diseases ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,nervous system ,Migraine ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Headaches ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Headache in epileptic population ranges from 8% to 15%. The aim of this paper was to study the clinical and temporal characteristics of primary headache comorbidity in idiopathic epileptic children. From June 2006 to June 2009, a cross-sectional multi-center study involving five Italian Child Neurology University Centers (two in Rome, one in Chieti, one in Naples, and one in L'Aquila) was conducted. Among 1,264 consecutively newly diagnosed, idiopathic, partial, or generalized, epileptic children, according to ILAE diagnostic criteria (aged between 5 and 15 years of age), we selected 142 children (11.2%) (130 of whom completed the study) who showed an associated peri-ictal and/or inter-ictal headache diagnosed according to the International Headache Society Criteria. Rare cases of “ictal epileptic headache”, in which headache represents the sole ictal epileptic manifestation, were excluded from this study. Post-ictal headaches were most frequent (62%). Pre-ictal headaches were less common (30%). Inter-ictal headaches were described in 57.6%. Clear migrainous features were present in 93% of pre-ictal and 81.4% of post-ictal headaches. Inter-ictal headaches meet criteria for migraines in 87%. The association between partial epilepsy and migraine without aura is most common and reported in 82% of our patients with peri-ictal headache and in 76.5% of patients with post-ictal headache.
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- 2011
25. Early add-on immunoglobulin administration in Rasmussen encephalitis: The hypothesis of neuroimmunomodulation
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Renzo Guerrini, Enrico Properzi, Francesco Nicita, Fabiana Ursitti, Alberto Spalice, Laura Papetti, Tiziana Granata, and Paola Iannetti
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Epilepsia partialis continua ,Epilepsia Partialis Continua ,Immunoglobulins ,Disease ,Lesion ,Atrophy ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,General Medicine ,Immunotherapy ,Cortical dysplasia ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Hemispherectomy ,Encephalitis ,Anticonvulsants ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Rasmussen encephalitis (RE) is a chronic inflammatory disease leading to unilateral hemispheric atrophy, associated with progressive neurological dysfunction and intractable seizures. The best approach to RE is hemispherectomy. However long-term immunotherapy seems to prevent or slow down hemispheric tissue loss and the associated functional decline. We describe a girl with epilepsia partialis continua (EPC) and progressive neurological dysfunction compatible with RE. The brain MRI showed a lesion that was initially interpreted as focal cortical dysplasia. Combined antiepileptic and immunomodulation were administered for two years with initial beneficial effects. The follow-up MRI, 4 year later showed. atrophic change in right parietal region. The association of antiepileptic and immunomodulation therapies may inhibit pathogenetic mechanisms responsible for neuronal loss in RE, slowing down the progression of the disease.
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- 2011
26. Novel missense mutation (L1917P) involving sac-domain of NSD1 gene in a patient with Sotos syndrome
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Claudio Di Biasi, Luigi Tarani, Laura Papetti, Marina Grasso, Francesco Nicita, Massimiliano Cecconi, Paola Iannetti, Fabiana Ursitti, and Alberto Spalice
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,sotos syndrome ,Mutation, Missense ,overgrowth ,seizures ,mri ,nsd1 ,syncope ,Scoliosis ,Biology ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Missense mutation ,Gene ,Pointed chin ,Sotos syndrome ,Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,Nuclear Proteins ,Bone age ,Histone-Lysine N-Methyltransferase ,Jaundice ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,Poor Feeding ,Endocrinology ,Child, Preschool ,Histone Methyltransferases ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
2007). These cardinal features are reported in morethan 90% of patients (Tatton-Brown and Rahman 2007).Typical facial characteristics include high, broad forehead,fronto–temporal sparse hairs, malar flushing, down-slantingpalpebral fissures and a pointed chin. In addition, a broadseries of major and/or minor anomalies may occur. Majorfeatures are present in more than 15% of patients, suchas advanced bone age, neonatal jaundice, neonatal hypo-tonia, seizures, scoliosis, poor feeding in infancy, maternalpre-eclampsia, joint laxity, cardiac, renal and brain anoma-lies (Tatton-Brown and Rahman 2007). Minor anomalies arenumerous (Tatton-Brown and Rahman 2007).Recently, mutations of nuclear receptor set domain con-taining protein 1 gene (
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- 2011
27. Developmental anomalies of the medial septal area: possible implication for limbic epileptogenesis
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Antonella Castronovo, Pasquale Parisi, Francesco Nicita, Alberto Verrotti, Fabiana Ursitti, Laura Papetti, Alberto Spalice, and Paola Iannetti
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DTI-fiber tracking ,Epilepsy ,Fornix ,Limbic system ,Septum pellucidum ,Child ,Child, Preschool ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,Electroencephalography ,Fornix, Brain ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Septum Pellucidum ,Septum of Brain ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Neurology (clinical) ,epilepsy ,septum pellucidum ,dti-fiber tracking ,fornix ,limbic system ,Grey matter ,Pediatrics ,Epileptogenesis ,White matter ,medicine ,Preschool ,business.industry ,Brain ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,DTI-fiber tracking, Epilepsy, Fornix, Limbic system, Septum pellucidum ,business ,Cavum septum pellucidum ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
The maldevelopment of the midline structures is connected with neurologic disorders. The cavum septum pellucidum (CSP) exists in the fetal period, then it is re-absorbed. The presence of unfused leaflets/fornices may be considered important in the genesis of neurodevelopmental abnormalities inclunding epilepsy. The limbic system includes a group of interconnected gray and white matter structures; in this circuit, the fornix is an important white matter connection with the septum pellucidum. Five children, 3–10 years of age, with epilepsy and an unfused septum pellucidum and fornices on MRI, were evaluated by diffusion tensor imaging-fiber tracking (DTI-FT) in order to explore the integrity of the axonal microenviroment of these structures. The patients had generalized tonic–clonic seizures (GTCS). The electroencephalogram (EEG) showed focal–temporal abnormalities with secondary generalization. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and DTI-FT demonstrated the CSP, and the presence of the fornix’s body split into two bundles with the fornices separated. The fornix appears more involved than CSP alone, as suggested by fornix atrophy observed in MTLE. Even if epilepsy is suggested to be a grey matter disorder, changes in the underlying brain connectivity have an important contribution in seizure generation and diffusion. In addition, the interconnections of medial septal area with hyppocampus, amygdala and entorhinal cortex, have led to the hypothesis of functional limbic epilepsy. In our patients, the role of DTI was not conclusive since the definition of the number of unmyelinated fibers responsible for epilepsy could not be demonstrated probably for a limited number of seizures and for a short period of drug administration.
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- 2011
28. Fiber tractography assessment in double cortex syndrome
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Pasquale Parisi, Francesco Nicita, Laura Papetti, Alberto Spalice, Alberto Verrotti, and Paola Iannetti
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Adult ,Male ,epilepsy ,subcortical band heterotopia ,dti fiber tracking ,double cortex ,Classical Lissencephalies and Subcortical Band Heterotopias ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Pediatrics ,White matter ,Epilepsy ,SUBCORTICAL BAND HETEROTOPIA ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Preschool ,business.industry ,Cognition ,General Medicine ,DTI fiber tracking ,Neurophysiology ,Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine.disease ,Double Cortex Syndrome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neuronal migration disorder ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,nervous system ,Double cortex ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Subcortical band heterotopia ,business ,Neuroscience ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
Subcortical band heterotopia (SBH) or double cortex syndrome is a malformation of cortical development that may be related to intractable epilepsy and severe mental retardation or to mild epilepsy and slight mental delay or normal cognitive functions. Several studies have been performed using neuroradiological or neurophysiological techniques, like SPECT, PET, MRS, fMRI, and MEG, in attempt to better characterize this neuronal migration disorder. Recently, also diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and fiber tracking (FT) have been used to investigate on white matter anomalies in SBH, adding more information about such gray matter anomaly. We report on three cases of SBH, evaluated with MRI, DTI, and FT. The data gathered from DTI and TF allow us to hypothesize a new functional role for heterotopic gray matter.
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- 2011
29. Should 'migralepsy' be considered an obsolete concept? A multicenter retrospective clinical/EEG study and review of the literature
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Paolo Aloisi, Paola Iannetti, Alberto Spalice, Pasquale Parisi, Alessia Di Fonzo, Giangennaro Coppola, Maria Pia Villa, Raffaella Bruschi, Alberto Verrotti, and Elisabetta Tozzi
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Postictal headache ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,epileptic headache ,Status migrainosus ,Migraine Disorders ,Migralepsy ,Hemicrania epileptica ,Electroencephalography ,Functional Laterality ,Ictal epileptic headache ,Epilepsy ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,medicine ,Ictal headache ,Humans ,Ictal ,Psychiatry ,Child ,Preschool ,Status epilepticus ,Migraine ,Retrospective Studies ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Peri-ictal headache ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Illusions ,Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,business.industry ,peri-ictal headache ,postictal headache ictal ,migraine ,epilepsy ,migralepsy ,hemicrania epileptica ,status migrainosus ,status epilepticus ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,International Classification of Headache Disorders ,business - Abstract
The few reports that have been published on the current International Classification of Headache Disorders, Second Edition (ICHD-II), criteria for migralepsy and hemicrania epileptica have highlighted the considerable confusion regarding this "hot topic" within both headache and epilepsy classifications (ICHD-II and International League Against Epilepsy [ILAE]). Indeed, the ICHD-II describes a migraine-triggered seizure as a rare event in which a seizure occurs during migraine aura; on the other hand, hemicrania epileptica is described as an "ictal headache" that occurs "synchronously" with a partial seizure. To confuse matters even further, neither the term migralepsy nor the term hemicrania epileptica is included in the currently used ILAE classification. On the basis of both a review of "migralepsy" cases in the literature and 16 additional retrospective multicenter cases, we suggest that the term migraine-triggered seizure or migralepsy be deleted from the ICHD-II classification until unequivocal evidence is provided of its existence, and that the term ictal epileptic headache be introduced into the ILAE classification.
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- 2011
30. NEUROCARDIOGENIC SYNCOPE AND EPILEPSY IN PEDIATRIC AGE: THE DIAGNOSTIC VALUE OF EEG-ECG HOLTER
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Mastrangelo, Mario, Rosanna, Mariani, Fabiana, Ursitti, Papetti, Laura, and Paola, Iannetti
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neurocardiogenic syncope ,head-up tilt table testing ,epilepsy ,neurocardiogenic syncope, EEG-ECG Holter, head-up tilt table testing, epilepsy ,EEG-ECG Holter - Published
- 2011
31. The role of cytomegalovirus in schizencephaly
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Fabiana Ursitti, Francesca Del Balzo, Francesco Nicita, Laura Papetti, Alberto Spalice, and Paola Iannetti
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Homeodomain Proteins ,Male ,business.industry ,SOXB1 Transcription Factors ,EMX2 ,Congenital cytomegalovirus infection ,DNA ,medicine.disease ,Bioinformatics ,Genetic analysis ,Pathogenesis ,Malformations of Cortical Development ,Schizencephaly ,medicine ,Genetics ,Homeobox ,Humans ,In patient ,Female ,Transcription Factors ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Genetics (clinical) ,business ,Gene ,Sequence Analysis - Abstract
We read with interest the paper of Mellado et al. [2010] who did not find pathogenic mutations in schizencepahlic patients in the LHX2, HESX1, and SOX2 genes, suggesting that other genes or non-genetic factors influencing genes critical to brain development must be responsible for schizencephaly. As well, Merello et al. [2008] demonstrated that the reported association of schizencephaly and mutations was not supported by current data, and that diagnostic testing of EMX2 is not justified. We reported in 1998 two children with left open-lip schizencephaly in whom cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection was demonstrated on the second day of life in Patient 1; in Patient 2 CMV infection was observed at the age of 4 years [Iannetti et al., 1998]. Genetic analysis did not demonstrate mutations in the EMX2 homeobox gene. In these two patients, the possible role of CMV infection in the complex multifactorial pathogenesis of schizencephaly was therefore suggested. On this basis, we suggested an evaluation for CMV infection in patients with schizencephaly in whom genetic tests were not definitive. REFERENCES
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- 2011
32. Bilateral (opercular and paracentral lobular) polymicrogyria and neurofibromatosis type 1
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Rosanna Mariani, Claudio Di Biase, Martino Ruggieri, Alberto Spalice, Isabella Torrente, Agata Polizzi, Irene Bottillo, Mario Mastrangelo, and Paola Iannetti
- Subjects
congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurofibromatosis 1 ,Status epilepticus ,neurocutaneous disorders/syndromes ,Central nervous system disease ,Exon ,Epilepsy ,Pregnancy ,Genetics ,Polymicrogyria ,Humans ,Medicine ,Neurofibromatosis ,Child ,neoplasms ,Genetics (clinical) ,status epilepticus ,biology ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,Brain ,Infant ,malformations of cortical development ,medicine.disease ,Malformation of cortical development ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Neurofibromin 1 ,eye diseases ,nervous system diseases ,bilateral polymicrogyria ,epilepsy ,neurofibromatosis type 1 (nf1) ,biology.protein ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Anecdotal cases of polymicrogyria (PMG; a malformation of cortical development consisting of an excessive number of small gyri with abnormal lamination) in patients with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) have been described; however, the cases were unilateral and had negative NF1 genetic testing. We describe an 11-year-old girl with NF1 manifesting as a complex epileptic syndrome, including partial seizures secondarily generalized and status epilepticus, who had in association, bilateral, asymmetrical (opercular and paracentral lobular) PMG. She had a 1-bp deletion (c.1862delC) in exon 12b of the NF1 gene. It is notable that, given the key role played by the NF1 gene product, neurofibromin, in normal brain development, and the relatively high frequency of other brain findings in NF1, there are not more NF1 cases with brain malformations manifesting as PMG. © 2011 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
- Published
- 2011
33. Benign convulsions associated with mild gastroenteritis: a multicenter clinical study
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Pasquale Parisi, Giuseppe Capovilla, Paolo Balestri, Emilio Franzoni, Sergio Agostinelli, Paola Costa, Giuliana Nanni, Salvatore Grosso, Pierangelo Veggiotti, Sara Malgesini, Dario Pruna, Valentina Gentile, Alberto Spalice, Francesca Beccaria, Giangennaro Coppola, Gemma Incorpora, Susanna Casellato, Salvatore Savasta, Alberto Verrotti, Paola Iannetti, Giovanni Crichiutti, Nelia Zamponi, Francesco Chiarelli, Verrotti A, Nanni G, Agostinelli S, Parisi P, Capovilla G, Beccaria F, Iannetti P, Spalice A, Coppola G, Franzoni E, Gentile V, Casellato S, Veggiotti P, Malgesini S, Crichiutti G, Balestri P, Grosso S, Zamponi N, Incorpora G, Savasta S, Costa P, Pruna D, and Chiarelli F
- Subjects
Male ,Rotavirus ,Pediatrics ,Afebrile seizures ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Water-Electrolyte Imbalance ,CHILDREN ,Neurological disorder ,Antiepileptic drugs ,Gastroenteritis ,Ictal EEG ,Age of Onset ,Anticonvulsants ,Child, Preschool ,Electroencephalography ,Epilepsy ,Family ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Hospitalization ,Humans ,Infant ,Intelligence Tests ,Italy ,Seizures ,Sex Characteristics ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Treatment Outcome ,Wechsler Scales ,Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,Convulsion ,Child ,Tomography ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,X-Ray Computed ,MILD GASTROENTERITIS ,medicine.symptom ,BENIGN CONVULSIONS ,medicine.medical_specialty ,EEG FEATURES ,Central nervous system disease ,medicine ,Ictal ,Preschool ,afebrile seizures ,antiepileptic drugs ,gastroenteritis ,ictal eeg ,rotavirus ,benign convulsions with mild gastroenteritis (CwG) ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Anticonvulsant ,Age of onset ,business - Abstract
Summary Purpose To assess the clinical characteristics and the outcome of benign convulsions associated with mild gastroenteritis (CwG) in Italian children. Methods We studied clinical and EEG features of 128 children with CwG who were hospitalized between January 2004 and February 2008 and then followed for at least 12 months in 14 Italian centers. Results Age at onset ranged from 6 to 60 months. The seizures were generalized in 73 cases (57%), only focal in 16 (12.5%), and secondarily generalized in 39 (30.5%). The duration of the seizures was under 5 min in 97 patients (75.8%), between 5 and 30 min in 26 (20.3%), and longer than 30 min in 5 (3.9%). Seventy-three participants (57%) had 2 or more seizures, which recurred within 24–48 h. In the acute phase, antiepileptic drugs were used in 72 patients (56.3%). Although interictal abnormalities were present in EEG of 28 children (21.9%), these reverted to normal. During the follow up period, only 6 patients (4.7%) suffered from recurrence of CwG, 7 (5.5%) suffered from simple febrile seizures, and 3 (2.3%) developed epilepsy. Conclusions Recognition of CwG in children allows pediatricians to avoid extensive evaluations and continuous antiepileptic therapy and to reassure parents regarding the lack of long-term complications.
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- 2011
34. BILATERAL (OPERCULAR AND PARACENTRAL LOBULAR) POLYMICROGYRIA AND NEUROFIBROMATOSIS TYPE 1
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Martino, Ruggieri, Mastrangelo, Mario, Spalice, Alberto, Rosanna, Mariani, Bottillo, Irene, Isabella, Torrente, CLAUDIO DI BIASI, and Paola, Iannetti
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status epilepticus ,neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) ,neurocutaneous disorders/syndromes ,malformations of cortical development ,bilateral polymicrogyria ,epilepsy - Published
- 2011
35. Norman-Roberts syndrome: Clinical and molecular studies
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Charles E. Schwartz, Paola Iannetti, Jeanne Dietz-Band, Luciana Chessa, Julie Timmerman, and Elizabeth Light
- Subjects
Male ,Microcephaly ,Lissencephaly ,Corpus callosum ,Colpocephaly ,Intellectual Disability ,medicine ,Humans ,Abnormalities, Multiple ,Child ,Norman–Roberts syndrome ,In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence ,Genetics (clinical) ,Cerebral Cortex ,business.industry ,Pachygyria ,Prominent occiput ,Brain ,Syndrome ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,Hypoplasia ,Agenesis of Corpus Callosum ,DNA Probes ,business ,Brain Stem ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 17 - Abstract
We report on a 7-year-old boy with microcephaly, bitemporal hollowing, low sloping forehead, slightly prominent occiput, widely set eyes, broad and prominent nasal bridge, and severe postnatal growth deficiency. Hypertonia, hyperreflexia, seizures, and profound mental retardation were also present. Brain MRI documented partial agyric cortex with patchy pachygyria, colpocephaly, and hypoplasia of corpus callosum and brain stem, which is consistent with the diagnosis of lissencephaly type I grade 2. On the basis of his phenotypic appearance the patient is considered to have the Norman-Roberts syndrome. Molecular studies, performed by means of in situ hybridization and DNA probe analysis, did not demonstrate deletion in the Miller-Dieker/isolated Lissencephaly critical region on the short arm of chromosome 17.
- Published
- 1993
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36. Long term outcome in children affected by absence epilepsy with onset before the age of three years
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Emilio Franzoni, Nelia Zamponi, Paola Iannetti, Alberto Verrotti, Pasquale Parisi, Francesco Chiarelli, Giangennaro Coppola, Paolo Curatolo, Cristina Olivieri, Salvatore Grosso, Sergio Agostinelli, Alberto Spalice, Verrotti A, Olivieri C, Agostinelli S, Coppola G, Parisi P, Grosso S, Spalice A, Zamponi N, Franzoni E, Iannetti P, Chiarelli F, and Curatolo P
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,Early-onset absence epilepsy ,ABSENCE EPILEPSY ,CHILDREN ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Epilepsy ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Cognition ,early-onset absence epilepsy ,ethosuximide ,outcome ,valproic acid ,long-term outcome ,Longitudinal Studies ,Family history ,Age of Onset ,Child ,EPILEPSY ,Outcome ,Valproic Acid ,FEBRILE SEIZURES ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Neuropsychology ,Settore MED/39 - Neuropsichiatria Infantile ,Absence ,Treatment Outcome ,Neurology ,Italy ,Child, Preschool ,Anticonvulsants ,Female ,Ethosuximide ,Valproic acid ,Adolescent ,Epilepsy, Absence ,Humans ,Retrospective Studies ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurological examination ,medicine ,Preschool ,Early-onset absence epilepsy, Valproic acid, Ethosuximide, Outcome ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,3-HZ SPIKE-WAVE COMPLEXES ,Age of onset ,business - Abstract
Objective The goal of this study was to define the long-term outcome of absence epilepsy presenting before the age of 3 years. Methods We retrospectively studied the medical records of 40 children from eight neuropediatric centers in Italy with respect to the personal and family histories of epilepsy or febrile seizures, time of follow-up, cognitive functions, treatment, and outcome. Results Forty patients were enrolled in this study. They all fulfilled the criteria for absence epilepsy with 3-Hz spike–wave complexes on the EEG, normal neurological examination, and no other seizures types. Seizure onset occurred between 24.1 and 36.0 months. There was a family history of epilepsy in 28%, and of febrile seizures in 13%. Thirty-three patients were treated with valproic acid (VPA), mostly used in monotherapy (26 patients) or in association with ethosuximide. At final follow-up, 33 patients were seizure free and 29 had normal EEGs. Thirty-four patients had a normal intelligence quotient (IQ), whereas 6 had a decreased IQ, mainly associated with poor control of seizures. Conclusion In our series, absence seizures presenting before the age of 3 appeared to have quite a good long-term clinical prognosis; the neuropsychological outcome was comparable to that of childhood epilepsy presenting after 3 years of age.
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- 2010
37. New trends in neuronal migration disorders
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Rosanna Mariani, Laura Papetti, Antonella Castronovo, Mario Mastrangelo, Fabiana Ursitti, Alberto Spalice, Paola Iannetti, and Alberto Verrotti
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Lissencephaly ,Neuronal migration ,Pediatrics ,medicine ,Polymicrogyria ,Schizencephaly ,Humans ,Heterotopia ,Brain ,Epilepsy ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Malformations of Cortical Development ,Malformations of Cortical Development, Group II ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cobblestone Lissencephaly ,General Medicine ,Pseudobulbar palsy ,Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine.disease ,Perisylvian polymicrogyria ,Heterotopia (medicine) ,Neuronal migration disorder ,Group II ,Psychology ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Neuronal migration disorders are an heterogeneous group of disorders of nervous system development and they are considered to be one of the most significant causes of neurological and developmental disabilities and epileptic seizures in childhood. In the last ten years, molecular biologic and genetic investigations have widely increased our knowledge about the regulation of neuronal migration during development. One of the most frequent disorders is lissencephaly. It is characterized by a paucity of normal gyri and sulci resulting in a "smooth brain". There are two pathologic subtypes: classical and cobblestone. Classical lissencephaly is caused by an arrest of neuronal migration whereas cobblestone lissencephaly caused by overmigration. Heterotopia is another important neuronal migration disorder. It is characterized by a cluster of disorganized neurons in abnormal locations and it is divided into three main groups: periventricular nodular heterotopia, subcortical heterotopia and marginal glioneural heterotopia. Polymicrogyria develops at the final stages of neuronal migration, in the earliest phases of cortical organization; bilateral frontoparietal form is characterized by bilateral, symmetric polymicrogyria in the frontoparietal regions. Bilateral perisylvian polymicrogyria causes a clinical syndrome which manifests itself in the form of mild mental retardation, epilepsy and pseudobulbar palsy. Schizencephaly is another important neuronal migration disorder whose clinical characteristics are extremely variable. This review reports the main clinical and pathophysiological aspects of these disorders paying particular attention to the recent advances in molecular genetics.
- Published
- 2010
38. Usefulness of diffusion tensor imaging and fiber tractography in neurological and neurosurgical pediatric diseases
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Claudio Di Biasi, Martino Ruggieri, Paola Iannetti, Laura Papetti, Pasquale Parisi, Francesco Nicita, Fabiana Ursitti, and Alberto Spalice
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Adolescent ,dti-ft ,brain malformations ,multiple sclerosis ,White matter ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,children ,Neural Pathways ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Brain Diseases ,Neurocutaneous Syndromes ,epilepsy ,neurocutaneous syndromes ,white matter ,business.industry ,Multiple sclerosis ,Fiber tractography ,Brain ,Infant ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,nervous system ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Neurology (clinical) ,Pediatric Neurology ,Neurosurgery ,Radiology ,business ,Tractography ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) with fiber tractography (FT) is a recently introduced imaging technique that is unique in providing detailed imaging of white matter (WM) tracts and connectivity between different regions of the brain not easily appreciated with other imaging methods. DTI has been used in recent years to investigate several disease conditions involving WM, including brain malformations, cerebral ischemia, multiple sclerosis, neurocutaneous syndromes, and brain tumors. In this paper, we focus our attention on the main applications of DTI–FT in the field of pediatric neurology, adding our personal experience.
- Published
- 2010
39. 'Epileptic Encephalopathy' of Infancy and Childhood: Electro-Clinical Pictures and Recent Understandings
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Pasquale, Parisi, Alberto, Spalice, Francesco, Nicita, Laura, Papetti, Fabiana, Ursitti, VERROTTI DI PIANELLA, Alberto, Paola, Iannetti, and Maria Pia Villa
- Published
- 2010
40. Epileptic nystagmus: description of a pediatric case with EEG correlation and SPECT findings
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Enrico Properzi, Alberto Spalice, Roberto Massa, Laura Papetti, Fabiana Ursitti, Paola Iannetti, and Francesco Nicita
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,spect ,Nystagmus ,Electroencephalography ,Nystagmus, Pathologic ,Epilepsy ,antiepileptic drug ,Gyrus ,Internal medicine ,Convulsion ,seizures ,epileptic nystagmus ,epileptic vertigo ,eeg ,medicine ,Humans ,Ictal ,Cysteine ,Cerebral perfusion pressure ,Cerebral Cortex ,Neurologic Examination ,Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Vision Tests ,Brain ,Organotechnetium Compounds ,medicine.disease ,Saccadic masking ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Neurology ,Child, Preschool ,Anesthesia ,Vertigo ,Cardiology ,Epilepsies, Partial ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiopharmaceuticals ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology - Abstract
Epileptic nystagmus (EN) describes repetitive eye movements that result from seizure activity. We describe a patient with EN and vertigo first noted at the age of 4 yr and 10 mo. Brain MRI did not show anomalies. Ictal EEG recordings revealed epileptic activity during three episodes of horizontal, left-beating nystagmus not crossing the midline. Ictal 99mTc-ECD SPECT demonstrated the presence of active foci in multiple cerebral regions including bilateral prefrontal, bilateral parieto-temporo-occipital and the left parieto-insular-vestibular areas. A wide area of hypoperfusion was also evident in the right hemisphere, prevailing in the parieto-occipital regions and the medial prefrontal gyrus. Topiramate was started at a dose of 2 mg/kg/d with complete seizure control after 14 d. EEG and SPECT were repeated after a seizure-free period of 1 mo; disappearance of epileptic activity and modification of cerebral perfusion were evident. This case reaffirms the cortical origin and involvement of temporo-occipital and frontal cortex in the genesis of saccadic epileptic nystagmus. Rapid complete control of clinical events coincided with the normalization of EEG and improvement of the SPECT pattern.
- Published
- 2010
41. Clinical and Pharmacological Aspects of Inflammatory Demyelinating Diseases in Childhood: An Update
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Pasquale Parisi, Francesco Nicita, Paola Iannetti, Laura Papetti, Alberto Verrotti, Enrico Properzi, Francesca Del Balzo, Martino Ruggieri, Alberto Spalice, and Fabiana Ursitti
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Demyelinating disease ,Adem ,Adult age ,Article ,Cognitive disabilities ,Myelin ,Disease-modifying therapies ,Immune-mediate polyradiculoneuropathies ,Immunomodulatory therapy ,Pediatric multiple sclerosis ,Pharmacology ,Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychiatry and Mental Health ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,Pathological ,Neurorehabilitation ,business.industry ,adem ,demyelinating disease ,disease-modifying therapies ,immune-mediate polyradiculoneuropathies ,immunomodulatory therapy ,pediatric multiple sclerosis ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Neuroregeneration ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Physical therapy ,business - Abstract
Inflammatory demyelinating diseases comprise a spectrum of disorders affecting the myelin of the central and peripheral nervous system. These diseases can usually be differentiated on the basis of clinical, radiological, laboratory and pathological findings. Recent studies have contributed to current awareness that inflammatory demyelinating diseases are not restricted to the adult age group, but are more common in pediatric age than previously believed. Some of pediatric inflammatory demyelinating diseases carry an unfavorable long-term prognosis but appropriate treatments can improve the outcome. The possibility of physical and cognitive disability resulting from these diseases, highlights the urgent need for therapeutic strategies for neurorehabilitation, neuroregeneration, and neurorepair. This review discusses characteristics of primary demyelinating diseases more frequently observed in childhood, focusing on epidemiology, clinical aspects and treatments.
- Published
- 2010
42. Lissencephalic syndromes: brain and beyond
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Paola Iannetti, Lorenzo Pavone, Giovanni Corsello, Piero Pavone, Pavone, L, Corsello, G, Pavone, P, and Iannetti, P
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Cerebral Cortex ,Neurons ,Classical Lissencephaly ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Pachygyria ,Cortical malformations ,Lissencephaly ,Brain ,Cell movement ,Syndrome ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Microlissencephaly ,Settore MED/38 - Pediatria Generale E Specialistica ,Lissencephalies ,Cell Movement ,lissencephaly, wide heterogeneity ,medicine ,Humans ,Neuroscience ,Abnormal neuronal migration - Abstract
Lissencephaly has been long maintained a malformation involving only the brain. Classic lissencephaly includes agyria and pachygyria and it is the most severe form of malformations derived from abnormal neuronal migration. It is defined as a smooth or nearly smooth cerebral surface with absence of normal sulci and gyria. It encompasses a group of syndromes which show many different clinical conditions. Four groups are actually distinguished: classic lissencephaly variants, other lissencephalies including forms with unknown pathogenesis, microlissencephaly spectrum and Cobblestone cortical malformations. Several genes and proteins are involved in this syndromic spectrum and each year new molecular data are reported in the literature: classifications in this sense are always in progress. Lissencephaly now is recognised to involve not only the brain but also several other organs and districts including eyes, face, muscles, genital organs, heart and bones. Mental retardation and different form of epilepsies usually drug-resistant are the main clinical signs. The Authors in this topic discuss on this subject, underlying the different forms of lissencephaly their wide heterogeneity and the complex involvement of several organs.
- Published
- 2010
43. Gelastic Epilepsy
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Luciano A. Basile, Umberto Raucci, Luigi Maria Fantozzi, Paola Iannetti, Luciana Chessa, and Luigi Bozzao
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Adolescent ,Mammillary body ,Hamartoma ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hypothalamic hamartoma ,030225 pediatrics ,Gelastic seizure ,Holoprosencephaly ,Humans ,Medicine ,Child ,Cerebral Cortex ,Laughter ,business.industry ,Pituitary tumors ,Electroencephalography ,Lobar holoprosencephaly ,Tuber Cinereum ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Surgery ,Tuber cinereum ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Hypothalamic Neoplasms ,Stereotyped Behavior ,medicine.symptom ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business - Abstract
Gelastic (laughing) epilepsy, relatively uncommon, is usually associated with hypothalamic hamartomas, pituitary tumors, astrocytomas of the mammillary bodies, and dysraphic conditions. Cases of unknown etiology are rare. In three of the four cases reported here, the diagnoses were hamartoma of the tuber cinereum; lobar holoprosencephaly; and lissencephaly type I, grade 2. In the fourth, radiographic investigation gave a normal result; a genetic etiology was suggested because of bilateral familial idiopathic epilepsy. In all patients, EEGs showed both focal spikes and generalized spike-and-wave discharges. The primary underlying neurophysiologic disorder may be provoked by the diffuse hyperexcitability of the cortex and subsequent firing of the thalamocortical networks with which the cortical brain is reciprocally interlinked.
- Published
- 1992
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44. Low-Dosage Immunoglobulins for an Infant With Hypogammaglobulinemia, Maple Syrup Urine Disease, and Parvovirus B19-associated Aplastic Crisis
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Giovanni Nigro, Paola Iannetti, Mauro Celli, R. Finocchiaro, Patrizia D'Eufemia, and Omero Giardini
- Subjects
biology ,Low dosage ,business.industry ,Parvovirus ,Maple syrup urine disease ,Parvoviridae Infections ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Hypogammaglobulinemia ,Immunology ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Antibody ,business - Published
- 2000
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45. Age-related variation in the presentation of childhood stroke varies with inclusion criteria: Author’s reply
- Author
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Alberto Spalice, Martino Ruggieri, Francesca Del Balzo, Paola Iannetti, Enrico Properzi, and Filippo Greco
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Variation (linguistics) ,business.industry ,Age related ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,General Medicine ,Presentation (obstetrics) ,Childhood stroke ,business ,Inclusion (education) - Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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46. Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase homozygous mutation in a young boy with cerebellar infarction
- Author
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Paola Iannetti, Carla Carducci, Enrico Properzi, Alberto Spalice, Italo Antonozzi, Francesca Del Balzo, and Francesco Massimo Perla
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Medicine ,Neurological examination ,Case Report ,Pediatrics ,MTHFR homozygous ,White matter ,medicine ,Pathological ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,biology ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,lcsh:RJ1-570 ,lcsh:Pediatrics ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.disease ,Thrombosis ,digestive system diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,children ,Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase ,Mutation (genetic algorithm) ,biology.protein ,business ,cerebellar infarction ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
Posterior circulation vascular occlusive disease in children is a rare and uncommonly reported event. Among the numerous risk factors, the methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) mutation is considered to be a common genetic cause of thrombosis in adults and children. Recently, a link between the MTHFR mutation and cerebrovascular disorders was reported in children. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is a great improvement on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), making the in vivo anatomical and pathological study of the brain and its fibers possible. In our patient cerebellar infarction was associated with MTHFR mutation and, in a standard neurological examination, DTI revealed normal white matter tracts.
- Published
- 2009
47. Complex epileptic (Foix-Chavany-Marie like) syndrome in a child with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) and bilateral (opercular and paracentral) polymicrogyria
- Author
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Martino Ruggieri, Paola Iannetti, Alberto Spalice, Mario Mastrangelo, and Rosanna Mariani
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurofibromatosis 1 ,Epilepsy, Frontal Lobe ,Comorbidity ,brain ,child ,comorbidity ,deglutition disorders ,electroencephalography ,epilepsy, frontal lobe ,female ,humans ,magnetic resonance imaging ,malformations of cortical development ,neurofibromatosis 1 ,syndrome ,Central nervous system disease ,Epilepsy ,medicine ,Polymicrogyria ,Humans ,Epileptic Syndrome ,Neurofibromatosis ,Child ,business.industry ,Brain ,Electroencephalography ,General Medicine ,Syndrome ,Pseudobulbar palsy ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,nervous system diseases ,Surgery ,Malformations of Cortical Development ,El Niño ,Tonic-clonic seizures ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,business ,Deglutition Disorders - Abstract
The association of brain malformations and symptomatic epilepsy in the setting of neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is rarely reported. When it occurs, patients can present clinically with infantile spasms, focal seizures, generalized tonic clonic seizures or atypical absences. We report on a 10-year-old (molecularly proven) NF1 girl manifesting a complex epileptic syndrome resembling the Foix–Chavany–Marie spectrum (also known as opercular syndrome) associated with bilateral (opercular and paracentral lobular) polymicrogyria (PMG). Anecdotal cases of unilateral PMG in the setting of NF1 have been described in association with other-than-opercular epileptic syndromes. The typical clinical opercular syndrome consisting in mild mental retardation, epilepsy and pseudobulbar palsy is usually associated to bilateral perisylvian PMG (BPP) Conclusion: To the best of our knowledge, the complex epileptic syndrome hereby reported has not been previously recorded in the setting of NF1. In addition, the present girl manifested all the clinical features of an opercular syndrome but had an asymmetrical PMG (not a BPP).
- Published
- 2009
48. RUOLO DELLA DTI NELLA DEFINIZIONE DELLE PATOLOGIE EPILETTICHE
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Laura, Papetti, Francesco, Nicita, Fabiana, Ursitti, Mastrangelo, Mario, Sollaku, Saadi, Spalice, Alberto, and Paola, Iannetti
- Published
- 2009
49. Stroke in children: inherited and acquired factors and age-related variations in the presentation of 48 paediatric patients
- Author
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Francesca Del Balzo, Enrico Properzi, Paola Iannetti, Filippo Greco, Alberto Spalice, and Martino Ruggieri
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,stroke ,children ,risk factors ,DNA Mutational Analysis ,Disease ,Intensive Care Units, Pediatric ,Brain Ischemia ,medicine ,Factor V Leiden ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Risk factor ,Child ,Stroke ,Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductase (NADPH2) ,Retrospective Studies ,Lupus anticoagulant ,biology ,business.industry ,Factor V ,Age Factors ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,biology.protein ,Female ,Prothrombin ,Activated protein C resistance ,business ,Intracranial Hemorrhages - Abstract
Aim: Stroke is relatively rare in children and the clinical presentation of paediatric stroke is often subtle. Numerous predisposing risk factors are known, and these can be both inherited and acquired. They include cardiac disease, vascular abnormalities, endothelial damage, infectious diseases, collagen tissue diseases, certain inborn errors of metabolism and anticardiolipin antibody, lupus anticoagulant and deficiencies of protein C, protein S, antithrombin or plasminogen. In addition, abnormal activated protein C resistance (or Factor V Leiden), Factor II G20219A variant, and the thermolabile variant of methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR C677T) need to be considered. Methods: To explore the prevalence of different predisposing conditions in paediatric stroke patients, we evaluated 48 patients, including subjects with ischaemic and haemorrhagic stroke subtypes. Results: Only 7 out of 48 (14.5%) had no recognizable risk factors: the majority of paediatric stroke patients had pre-existing risk factors that predisposed to the condition. The major genetic risk factor in our series of patients was homozygosity for the MTHFR C677T mutation (7 out of 48 patients); three more patients were found to be heterozygous for the Factor V Leiden mutation. Acquired predisposing conditions were present in 23 out of 48 patients and included pulmunar stenosis, head trauma, hyperlipidaemia and varicella infection. A total of 17 patients had both genetic and acquired predisposing factors. Conclusion: Our results emphasize that multiple predisposing risk factors commonly predispose to paediatric stroke. In addition, the primary clinical presentation appeared to differ between the older and younger children: hemiparesis was the typical presentation in children
- Published
- 2009
50. TRATTAMENTO CON INFUSIONE CONTINUA DI ALFA INTERFERON PER VIA INTRATECALE TRAMITE POMPA D’ INFUSIONE LOMBARE NELLA PANENCEFALITE SUBACUTA SCLEROSANTE: PRESENTAZIONE DI UN CASO CLINICO
- Author
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Rosanna, Mariani, Mastrangelo, Mario, Alessandra, Menichella, Properzi, Enrico, Spalice, Alberto, and Paola, Iannetti
- Published
- 2009
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