15 results on '"Sara Carnicella"'
Search Results
2. Functional levels and MRI patterns of muscle involvement in upper limbs in Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
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Claudia Brogna, Lara Cristiano, Tommaso Tartaglione, Tommaso Verdolotti, Lavinia Fanelli, Luana Ficociello, Giorgio Tasca, Roberta Battini, Giorgia Coratti, Nicola Forcina, Roberto De Santis, Giulia Norcia, Sara Carnicella, Cesare Colosimo, Pierre Carlier, Marika Pane, and Eugenio Mercuri
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The aim of the study was to evaluate the spectrum of upper limb functional activities and imaging finding in a cohort of patients affected by Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Thirty-one patients of age between 5 and 29 years were included in the study (17 ambulant and 14 non-ambulant). They were all assessed using the Performance of Upper Limb (PUL) test and muscle MRI of shoulder, arm and forearm in order to establish if the functional scores obtained at shoulder, mid and distal level related to specific patterns of involvement in each upper limb segment on muscle MRI. At shoulder level, latissimus dorsi, serratus anterior, infraspinatus and subscapularis were always involved, even in patients with full functional scores at shoulder level. Diffuse and severe involvement of all muscles was found in the patients with a PUL shoulder functional score of ≤ 5. At arm level biceps brachii, brachialis and triceps were generally concordantly involved or spared. Some degree of involvement could already be detected in patients with reduced scores on the PUL mid domain. They were generally severely involved in patients with functional scores less than 6 at mid-level. At distal level supinator and pronator muscles were often involved, followed by brachioradialis and, less frequently, by the muscles of the flexor compartment. The extensor muscles were generally completely spared. A diffuse and severe involvement was found only in patients who had very low scores (8 or below) on the PUL distal domain. The integrated use of functional scales and imaging allowed to establish patterns of involvement at each level, and the functional scores that were more frequently associated with diffuse and severe involvement.
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- 2018
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3. Early Gross Motor Milestones in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
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Simona Lucibello, Nicola Forcina, Sara Carnicella, Claudia Brogna, Gloria Ferrantini, Giorgia Coratti, Lavinia Fanelli, Marika Pane, Elisa Pede, Eugenio Mercuri, Roberta Onesimo, Giulia Norcia, and Graziamaria Cicala
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Male ,Duchenne muscular dystrophy ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Early signs ,Gross motor skill ,gross motor milestones ,Walking ,Review ,Sitting ,Settore MED/39 - NEUROPSICHIATRIA INFANTILE ,Humans ,Medicine ,early motor milestones ,Motor skill ,Retrospective Studies ,Sitting Position ,Past medical history ,Settore MED/48 - SCIENZE INFERMIERISTICHE E TECNICHE NEURO-PSICHIATRICHE E RIABILITATIVE ,biology ,business.industry ,dystrophin isoforms ,Infant ,Exons ,medicine.disease ,Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne ,Natural history ,Settore MED/26 - NEUROLOGIA ,Neurology ,Child, Preschool ,Mutation ,biology.protein ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Dystrophin - Abstract
Background: Over the last few years there has been increasing attention to detect early signs of impairment in young Duchenne muscular dystrophy boys but less has been reported on whether the delay may also affect the very early aspects of motor development, such as gross motor milestones. Objective: The aim of this study was to retrospectively assess the age when early motor milestones were achieved in Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Methods: The study is a retrospective analysis of data collected as part of a larger natural history project. Information on past medical history, collected at the time the boys were seen for the first time, were recorded and re available on clinical notes and on electronic CRF. Results: Data were collected in 134 DMD boys. Sitting was achieved at 7.04 months. The % of DMD boys not achieving sitting by 9.4 months was 10%, ranging from 2% in the boys with mutations before exon 44 to 33% in those beyond exon 63. Walking was achieved at a mean age of 16.35 months. The % of DMD boys not achieving independent walking by 18 months was 17%, ranging from 9% in the boys with mutations between 44 and 51 to 42% in those beyond exon 63. Conclusions: Our results showed that the risk of a delay in sitting and walking was increasingly high in patients with mutations predictive of the involvement of different brain dystrophin isoforms.
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- 2021
4. Clinical Variability in Spinal Muscular Atrophy Type <scp>III</scp>
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Claudio Bruno, Gian Luca Vita, Jacqueline Montes, Maria Sframeli, Tina Duong, Valeria Sansone, Annalia Frongia, Mariacristina Scoto, John W. Day, Francesco Muntoni, Giorgia Coratti, Enrico Bertini, Jessica Exposito Escudero, Simona Lucibello, Marika Pane, Sonia Messina, Allan M. Glanzman, Eugenio Mercuri, Roberto De Sanctis, Elena S. Mazzone, Anna Mayhew, Laura Antonaci, Francesca Bovis, Andrés Nascimento Osorio, Matthew Civitello, Sara Carnicella, Rachel Salazar, Richard S. Finkel, Chiara Marini Bettolo, Adele D'Amico, Nathalie Goemans, Robert Muni Lofra, Darryl C. De Vivo, Marleen Van den Hauwe, Maria Carmela Pera, Evelin Milev, Amy Pasternak, Sally Dunaway Young, Emilio Albamonte, and Basil T. Darras
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Longitudinal study ,Adolescent ,Models, Neurological ,Gene Dosage ,Spinal Muscular Atrophies of Childhood ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Settore MED/39 - NEUROPSICHIATRIA INFANTILE ,0302 clinical medicine ,Age of Onset ,Child ,Child, Preschool ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Humans ,Survival of Motor Neuron 2 Protein ,Models ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Preschool ,business.industry ,Repeated measures design ,Retrospective cohort study ,Spinal muscular atrophy ,medicine.disease ,SMA ,030104 developmental biology ,Neurology ,Neurological ,Cohort ,Neurology (clinical) ,sma ,Age of onset ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cohort study - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: We report natural history data in a large cohort of 199 patients with spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) type III assessed using the Hammersmith Functional Motor Scale Expanded (HFMSE). The aim of the study was to establish the annual rate and possible patterns of progression according to a number of variables, such as age of onset, age at assessment, SMN2 copy number, and functional status. METHODS: HFMSE longitudinal changes were assessed using piecewise linear mixed-effects models. The dependency in the data due to repeated measures was accounted for by a random intercept per individual and an unstructured covariance R matrix was used as correlation structure. An additional descriptive analysis was performed for 123 patients, for a total of 375 12-month assessments. RESULTS: A break point at age 7 years was set for the whole cohort and for SMA IIIA and IIIB. Age, SMA type, and ambulatory status were significantly associated with changes in mean HFMSE score, whereas gender and SMN2 copy number were not. The increase in response before the break point of age 7 years is significant only for SMA IIIA (ß = 1.79, p < 0.0001). After the break point, the change in the rate of HFMSE score significantly decrease for both SMA IIIA (ß = -1.15, p < 0.0001) and IIIB (ß = -0.69, p = 0.002). INTERPRETATION: Our findings contribute to the understanding of the natural history of SMA type III and will be helpful in the interpretation of the real-world data of patients treated with commercially available drugs. ANN NEUROL 2020;88:1109-1117.
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- 2020
5. Ultrasound assessment of diaphragmatic function in type 1 spinal muscular atrophy
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Eugenio Mercuri, Nicola Forcina, Roberta Onesimo, Gloria Ferrantini, Danilo Buonsenso, Beatrice Berti, Lavinia Fanelli, Antonietta Curatola, Marika Pane, Daniela Leone, Giulia Norcia, Sara Carnicella, Concetta Palermo, Simona Lucibello, and Roberto De Sanctis
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Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Diaphragm ,Diaphragmatic breathing ,Spinal Muscular Atrophies of Childhood ,Contractility ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Respiratory system ,Child ,Prospective cohort study ,Ultrasonography ,Noninvasive Ventilation ,Diaphragm contraction ,business.industry ,Respiration ,Ultrasound ,Infant ,Reproducibility of Results ,SMA ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Cardiology ,Female ,Diaphragmatic excursion ,business - Abstract
Objective To investigate ultrasound features of diaphragm motion and function in type 1 spinal muscular atrophy (SMA-1) patients. Design Prospective study. Patients The study cohort included SMA-1 children younger than 18-year-old. Control subjects included type 2 and type 3 SMA and other neuromuscular disorders younger than 18-year-old. Methodology Diaphragm ultrasound evaluating diaphragmatic excursion, speed of diaphragmatic contraction, duration of the respiratory cycle, inspiratory/expiratory relationship, end-inspiratory and -expiratory thickness, thickening fraction, and pattern of contractility. The interrater reliability for each variable was established by calculation of Cohen's k coefficient. Results Twenty-three SMA-1 patients and 12 controls were evaluated. Diaphragm ultrasound values were within normal ranges in all study cohort patients and no difference was found with controls. There was a gradient of diaphragm function with SMA 1.9 subgroup having the best and SMA 1.1 having the worst parameters, particularly in end-inspiratory thickness and diaphragmatic excursion (P = .031 and P = .041, respectively). Seventy-four percent of SMA-1 patients had a dysmotility pattern of diaphragm contraction, mostly represented in SMA 1.9 subgroup (P = .001). This pattern was observed in 92.8% of children on noninvasive ventilation (NIV) for less than 16 hours/d of and in 20% patients with invasive ventilation or NIV for more than 16 hours/d (P = .027). The dysmotility pattern was never observed in the control group. The levels of interobserver agreement were high for "diaphragm irregularities," "inspiratory/expiratory relationship," and "diaphragm thickness," and good for the other variables. Conclusions Ultrasound can be used to evaluate diaphragm function and contractility in SMA-1 children, providing additional information to the clinical examination and functional respiratory tests, describing a characteristic contractility pattern in these patients. Longitudinal studies are needed to understand the impact of diaphragm dysmotility and other parameters on long-term outcome in SMA-1 patients.
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- 2020
6. Age, corticosteroid treatment and site of mutations affect motor functional changes in young boys with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
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Coratti, Giorgia, Lenkowicz, Jacopo, Norcia, Giulia, Lucibello, Simona, Ferraroli, Elisabetta, D'Amico, Adele, Bello, Luca, Pegoraro, Elena, Messina, Sonia, Ricci, Federica, Mongini, Tiziana, Berardinelli, Angela, Masson, Riccardo, Previtali, Stefano C, D'Angelo, Grazia, Magri, Francesca, Comi, Giacomo P, Politano, Luisa, Passamano, Luigia, Vita, Gianluca, Sansone, Valeria A, Albamonte, Emilio, Panicucci, Chiara, Bruno, Claudio, Pini, Antonella, Bertini, Enrico Silvio, Patarnello, Stefano, Pane, Marika, Mercuri, Eugenio Maria, Fanelli, Lavinia, Nicola, Forcina, Giulia, Stanca, Sara, Carnicella, De Sanctis, Roberto, Brogna, Claudia, Cutrona, Costanza, Anna Lia Frongia, Pera, Maria Carmela, Laura, Antonaci, Gloria, Ferrantini, Beatrice, Berti, Daniela, Leone, Concetta, Palermo, Melania, Giannotta, Giulia, Colia, Adelina, Carlesi, Giacomo De Luca, Irene, Mizzoni, Annamaria, Bonetti, Michela, Catteruccia, Vincenzo Di Bella, Maria, Sframeli, Massimo, Russo, Enrica, Rolle, Alice, Gardani, Stefano, Parravicini, Riccardo, Zanin, Maria Teresa Arnoldi, Claudia, Dosi, Ilaria, Pedrinelli, Giovanni, Baranello, Emilio, Albamonte, Francesca, Salmin, and Simone, Morando
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Male ,Multidisciplinary ,Settore MED/48 - SCIENZE INFERMIERISTICHE E TECNICHE NEURO-PSICHIATRICHE E RIABILITATIVE ,Settore ING-INF/05 - SISTEMI DI ELABORAZIONE DELLE INFORMAZIONI ,Duchenne ,Dystrophin ,Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne ,Settore MED/26 - NEUROLOGIA ,Settore MED/39 - NEUROPSICHIATRIA INFANTILE ,Adrenal Cortex Hormones ,Child, Preschool ,Mutation ,Humans ,Protein Isoforms ,Muscular Dystrophy ,Child ,Preschool - Abstract
The aim of this study was to establish the possible effect of age, corticosteroid treatment and brain dystrophin involvement on motor function in young boys affected by Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy who were assessed using the North Star Ambulatory Assessment between the age of 4 and 7 years. The study includes 951 North Star assessments from 226 patients. Patients were subdivided according to age, to the site of mutation and therefore to the involvement of different brain dystrophin isoforms and to corticosteroids duration. There was a difference in the maximum North Star score achieved among patients with different brain dystrophin isoforms (p = 0.007). Patients with the involvement of Dp427, Dp140 and Dp71, had lower maximum NSAA scores when compared to those with involvement of Dp427 and Dp140 or of Dp427 only. The difference in the age when the maximum score was achieved in the different subgroups did not reach statistical significance. Using a linear regression model on all assessments we found that each of the three variables, age, site of mutation and corticosteroid treatment had an influence on the NSAA values and their progression over time. A second analysis, looking at 12-month changes showed that within this time interval the magnitude of changes was related to corticosteroid treatment but not to site of mutation. Our findings suggest that each of the considered variables appear to play a role in the progression of North Star scores in patients between the age of 4 and 7 years and that these should be carefully considered in the trial design of boys in this age range.
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- 2022
7. Oral and Swallowing Abilities Tool (OrSAT) in nusinersen treated patients
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Beatrice Berti, Lavinia Fanelli, Giulia Stanca, Roberta Onesimo, Concetta Palermo, Daniela Leone, Roberto de Sanctis, Sara Carnicella, Giulia Norcia, Nicola Forcina, Giorgia Coratti, Maria Carmela Pera, Valentina Giorgio, Carolina Ausili Cefaro, Richard Finkel, Marika Pane, and Eugenio Mercuri
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child development ,paediatrics ,Settore MED/26 - NEUROLOGIA ,Settore MED/39 - NEUROPSICHIATRIA INFANTILE ,Settore MED/38 - PEDIATRIA GENERALE E SPECIALISTICA ,neurology ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health - Abstract
IntroductionThe aim of the study was to longitudinally assess swallowing abilities in nusinersen-treated patients with type 1 spinal muscular atrophy.MethodsTwenty infants with type 1 SMA (11 female and 9 male) treated with nusinersen between 3 weeks and 15 months of age, were assessed using the Oral and Swallowing Abilities Tool (OrSAT). The duration of the follow-up after treatment ranged between 12 months and 62 months.ResultsTwelve of the 20 infants had normal swallowing and there was no need for tube feeding at the time treatment started. Ten of the 12 had consistently normal swallowing with no need for tube feeding on follow-up. The other two required tube feeding but they regained the ability to eat some food by mouth.The remaining 8 infants already had tube feeding inserted at the time treatment started: 4 of them also had tracheostomy and they showed no changes on the OrSAT Scale. The other 4 who had tube feeding but no tracheostomy had partial functional improvement.ConclusionOur results suggest that the degree of functional impairment at the time treatment is started can help to predict the progression of swallowing abilities. The use of a structured assessment also helped to detect partial improvements.
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- 2022
8. Long term follow-up of scoliosis progression in type II SMA patients
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Giorgia Coratti, Maria Carmela Pera, Adele D'Amico, Claudio Bruno, Francesca Bovis, Consolato Gullì, Noemi Brolatti, Marina Pedemonte, Massimo Apicella, Laura Antonaci, Martina Ricci, Anna Capasso, Gianpaolo Cicala, Costanza Cutrona, Roberto de Sanctis, Sara Carnicella, Nicola Forcina, Michela Catteruccia, Maria Beatrice Damasio, Luca Labianca, Antonio Leone, Enrico Bertini, Marika Pane, and Eugenio Mercuri
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Settore MED/48 - SCIENZE INFERMIERISTICHE E TECNICHE NEURO-PSICHIATRICHE E RIABILITATIVE ,Natural history ,Spinal muscular atrophy ,Trajectories ,Radiography ,Settore MED/39 - NEUROPSICHIATRIA INFANTILE ,Neurology ,Scoliosis ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,Genetics (clinical) ,Cobb's angle ,Neuromuscular disorders ,Follow-Up Studies ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
The aim of this study is to retrospectively assess onset and progression of scoliosis in type II SMA patients not treated with the approved disease modifying treatments. Scoliosis was evaluated by measuring the scoliosis angle on X-ray obtained in the anteroposterior view in sitting position (Cobb's angle method). Eighty-four patients had at least one assessment of scoliosis angle (287 assessments). There was a positive correlation between age and scoliosis angles (p0.001) with a progressive increase of scoliosis with age. When subdividing the population by HFMSE score (10; 11-22;22), there was a progressive increase in scoliosis angles with decreasing HFMSE scores. The difference between HFMSE categories was significant (p0.001). Fifty-four patients had at least two assessments at 6-month distance and were retained for the longitudinal analysis. Using a mixed model, age, functional status and scoliosis angle at baseline were predictive on scoliosis progression. The mean annual rate of increase of scoliosis angle was 5.63 (95%CI: 4.74-6.52). Our results confirm the progression of scoliosis in untreated type II SMA providing details of the progression in relation to different variables. With different therapeutical options being available in many countries, our findings will provide reference data for establishing possible differences in the trajectories of progression with treated type II individuals.
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- 2022
9. Age related treatment effect in type II Spinal Muscular Atrophy pediatric patients treated with nusinersen
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Jacqueline Montes, Marika Pane, Enrico Bertini, Francesco Muntoni, Maria Carmela Pera, Anna Lia Frongia, Amy Pasternak, Eugenio Mercuri, Valeria A. Sansone, John W. Day, Maria Sframeli, Francesca Salmin, Adele D'Amico, Matthew Civitello, Simona Lucibello, Sally Dunaway Young, Claudio Bruno, Laura Antonaci, Giorgia Coratti, Sara Carnicella, Tina Duong, Darryl C. De Vivo, Richard S. Finkel, Allan M. Glanzman, Sonia Messina, Paola Tacchetti, and Basil T. Darras
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Oligonucleotides ,Spinal Muscular Atrophies of Childhood ,Cohort Studies ,Upper Extremity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Settore MED/39 - NEUROPSICHIATRIA INFANTILE ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Age related ,Nusinersen ,medicine ,Functional outcome measures ,Hammersmith Functional Motor Scale Expanded ,Revised Upper Limb Module ,Spinal Muscular Atrophy ,Age Factors ,Child ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Humans ,Linear Models ,Multivariate Analysis ,Treatment effect ,Preschool ,Genetics (clinical) ,Settore MED/48 - SCIENZE INFERMIERISTICHE E TECNICHE NEURO-PSICHIATRICHE E RIABILITATIVE ,business.industry ,SMA ,Spinal muscular atrophy type II ,Natural history ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Cohort ,Upper limb ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Previous natural history studies suggest that type II SMA patients remain stable over one year but show some progression over two years. Since nusinersen approval, there has been increasing attention to identify more specific age-related changes. The aim of the study was to establish 12-month changes in a cohort of pediatric type II SMA treated with nusinersen and to establish possible patterns of treatment effect in relation to different variables such as age, baseline value and SMN2 copy number. The Hammersmith Functional Motor Scale Expanded and the Revised Upper Limb Module were performed at T0 and 12 months after treatment (T12). Data in treated patients were compared to available data in untreated patients collected by the same evaluators.Seventy-seven patients of age between 2.64 and 17.88 years (mean:7.47, SD:3.79) were included. On t-test there was an improvement, with increased mean scores between T0 and T12 on both scales (p 0.001). Using multivariate linear regression analysis, age and baseline scores were predictive of changes on both scales (p 0.05) while SMN2 copy number was not. Differences were also found between study cohort and untreated data on both scales (p 0.001). At 12 months, an increase in scores was observed in all the age subgroups at variance with natural history data. Our real-world data confirm the treatment effect of nusinersen in pediatric type II SMA patients and that the data interpretation should take into account different variables. These data confirm and expand the ones already reported in the Cherish study.
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- 2021
10. Oral and Swallowing Abilities Tool (OrSAT) for Type 1 SMA Patients: Development of a New Module
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Giulia Norcia, Beatrice Berti, Valentina Giorgio, Nicola Forcina, Daniela Leone, Richard S. Finkel, Concetta Palermo, Antonella Cerchiari, Eugenio Maria Mercuri, Giorgia Coratti, Lavinia Fanelli, Simona Lucibello, Marika Pane, Roberta Onesimo, Roberto De Sanctis, and Sara Carnicella
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Research Report ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,dysphagia ,Population ,Spinal Muscular Atrophies of Childhood ,oral motor function ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Settore MED/39 - NEUROPSICHIATRIA INFANTILE ,Swallowing ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Functional abilities ,Activities of Daily Living ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Fatigue ,education.field_of_study ,Settore MED/48 - SCIENZE INFERMIERISTICHE E TECNICHE NEURO-PSICHIATRICHE E RIABILITATIVE ,business.industry ,Significant difference ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Developmentally Appropriate Practice ,Spinal muscular atrophy ,SMA ,Checklist ,Deglutition ,Settore MED/26 - NEUROLOGIA ,Neurology ,Swallowing impairment ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Deglutition Disorders ,business ,type 1 SMA infants ,swallowing ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
We describe the development of a new tool specifically designed to record oral abilities, swallowing and, more generally, feeding in young type 1 SMA patients, to be used during the first 24 months of life. The tool is composed by a checklist and a separate section summarizing the functional abilities into levels of feeding/swallowing impairment. The checklist includes 12 questions assessing aspects thought to be clinically meaningful for a type 1 SMA population and developmentally appropriate for infants during the first months of life. Each item is graded with a score of 0 or 1, depending on the child’s ability to perform the activity. As some items are age-dependent, the number of items to be used, and therefore the maximum score, changes with increasing age. The levels of feeding/swallowing impairment include four levels that can be identified using easily identifiable clinical criteria. In an attempt to validate the tool in an untreated population we applied it to 24 type 1 SMA patients (age range: 2.3–24.1 months, mean: 10.8) in whom the same information collected by the new tool had been previously recorded using a less-structured format. When patients were classified in three groups according to the Dubowitz decimal classification, there was a significant difference both at baseline and at follow-up (p
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- 2021
11. Oral and Swallowing Abilities Test (Orsat) for Type 1 Sma Patients: Development and Application of a New Module
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Antonella Cerchiari St, Marika Pane, Beatrice Berti, Roberta Onesimo, V. Giorgio, Richard S. Finkel, Nicola Forcina, Giulia Norcia, Roberto De Sanctis, Sara Carnicella, Giorgia Coratti, Daniela Leone, Simona Lucibello, Lavinia Fanelli, Concetta Palermo, and Eugenio Mercuri
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Swallowing ,business.industry ,medicine ,SMA ,business ,Test (assessment) - Abstract
Background: Swallowing is one of the most important aspects in the care of type 1 spinal muscular atrophy. Main text:The aim of this paper is to describe the development of a new tool specifically designed to record different aspects related to oral abilities, swallowing and feeding in young type1 SMA patients. We also report its application to a cohort of type 1 infants to identify possible changes during the first 24 months of life. The new tool includes a checklist with 12 questions for carers and a classification of levels of impairment.The scale was retrospectively used in 24 type 1 patients (8 females and 16 males,age range from2.3 to 24.1 months (average age: 10.8 months), classified according to the Dubowitz's decimal classification into 1.1 (n=8); 1.5 (n=8); 1.9 (n=8). There was a significant difference among the 3 subtypes both at baseline and at follow up (pConclusion: Our results suggest that the new tool may help to routinely capture changes over time in type 1 infants and that the trajectories of progression reflect the overall severity of the disease. The items assessing fatigue during the nursing sessions were the most frequently impaired even in infants who did not have any other obvious clinical sign of swallowing difficulties.
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- 2020
12. Long-term progression in type II spinal muscular atrophy: A retrospective observational study
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S. Messina, Eugenio Mercuri, Nicola Forcina, Marika Pane, Roberto De Sanctis, Giorgia Coratti, Sara Carnicella, E. Mazzone, Lavinia Fanelli, Maria Carmela Pera, Simona Lucibello, Laura Antonaci, Giulia Norcia, and Anna Lia Frongia
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Adult ,Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Spinal ,Scoliosis ,Spinal Muscular Atrophies of Childhood ,Article ,Time ,Muscular Atrophy, Spinal ,Cohort Studies ,Young Adult ,Settore MED/39 - NEUROPSICHIATRIA INFANTILE ,medicine ,Humans ,Young adult ,Child ,Preschool ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Disease Progression ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,SMA ,Spinal muscular atrophy type II ,Muscular Atrophy ,Cohort ,Observational study ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
ObjectiveTo report the long-term progression in a cohort of patients with type II spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) assessed with the Hammersmith Functional Motor Scale–Expanded.MethodsSeventy-three patients (age 2.6–25 years) were included in the study. Twenty-eight of the 73 were first assessed before the age of 5 years and had been followed up for ≈5 years or longer. We observed an overall progression that was not linear. A piecewise regression analysis showed an improvement of scores in the younger patients with a point of slope change at ≈5 years of age, a decline between 5 and 13 years of age, and stability/slower decline after that.ResultsPatients with the lowest scores at baseline had the earliest onset of scoliosis and a higher need for noninvasive ventilation compared to those with higher scores. Our results confirm that on the long-term follow-up all patients with type II SMA show a clear and progressive decline.ConclusionThe severity of functional impairment at baseline can help to predict the magnitude of changes over time and the overall progression, including onset of scoliosis and need for noninvasive ventilation.
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- 2019
13. An observational study of functional abilities in infants, children, and adults with type 1 SMA
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Pane, Marika, Palermo, Concetta, Messina, Sonia, Sansone, Valeria A, Bruno, Claudio, Catteruccia, Michela, Sframeli, Maria, Albamonte, Emilio, Pedemonte, Marina, D'Amico, Adele, Brigati, Giorgia, De Sanctis, Roberto, Coratti, Giorgia, Lucibello, Simona, Bertini, Enrico Silvio, Vita, Giuseppe, Tiziano, Francesco Danilo, Mercuri, Eugenio Maria, Italian EAP Working Group: Daniela Leone, Gloria, Ferrantini, Beatrice, Berti, Pera, Maria Carmela, Nicola, Forcina, Sara, Carnicella, Giulia, Norcia, Piastra, Marco, Genovese, Orazio, Pedicelli, Alessandro, Paola, Cimbolli, Antonio, Versaci, Imma, Rulli, Eloisa, Gitto, Cristina, Faraone, Stefania La Foresta, Maria, Macrì, Giulia, Colia, Anna Maria Bonetti, Adelina, Carlesi, Renato, Cutrera, Maria Beatrice Chiarini, Marta, Ferretti, Alberto, Garaventa, Giovanni, Montobbio, Carlo, Gandolfo, Valentina, Iurilli, Paola, Tacchetti, Emilia, Bobeica, Valentina, Lanzillotta, Alice, Pirola, Sara, Lupone, Elisa De Mattia, Elisa, Falcier, Fabrizio, Rao, Elisabetta, Roma, Caterina, Conti, Francesca, Salmin, Cristina, Grandi, Fausto, Fedeli, Luca, Mancini, Nicola, Tovaglieri, Paolo, Stoia, Maurizio, Heinen, Valeria, Cozzi, Beatrice, Travaglia, Emma, Mizzotti, Daniela, Lauro, Luca, Binetti, Anita, Pallara, Simona, Spinoglio, Maria Letizia Solinas, Grazia, Zappa, Francesca, Penno, Cristina, Ponzanelli, and Casiraghi, Jacopo Luca
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Activities of daily living ,Cross-sectional study ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Oligonucleotides ,Neurological examination ,Spinal Muscular Atrophies of Childhood ,Severity of Illness Index ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Disability Evaluation ,0302 clinical medicine ,Settore MED/39 - NEUROPSICHIATRIA INFANTILE ,Severity of illness ,Activities of Daily Living ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,SMA ,Age of Onset ,Child ,Interactive Ventilatory Support ,Preschool ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Spinal muscular atrophy type 1, Phenotype, SMN2 copies, Survival, Gastrostomy, Tracheostomy, Noninvasive ventilation ,Infant ,Spinal muscular atrophy ,medicine.disease ,Gastrostomy ,Survival of Motor Neuron 1 Protein ,Settore MED/26 - NEUROLOGIA ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Child, Preschool ,Mutation ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Age of onset ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cohort study - Abstract
ObjectiveTo report cross-sectional clinical findings in a large cohort of patients affected by type 1 spinal muscular atrophy.MethodsWe included 122 patients, of age ranging between 3 months and 22 years, 1 month. More than 70% (85/122) were older than 2 years and 25% (31/122) older than 10 years. Patients were classified according to the severity of phenotype and to the number of SMN2 copies.ResultsPatients with the more common and the most severe phenotype older than 2 years were, with few exceptions, on noninvasive ventilation and, with increasing age, more often had tracheostomy or >16-hour ventilation and a gastrostomy inserted. In contrast, 25 of the 28 patients with the mildest phenotype older than 2 years had no need for tracheostomy or other ventilatory or nutritional support. In patients older than 2 years, the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Infant Test of Neuromuscular Disorders scores were generally lower compared to those found in younger patients and showed distinct levels of functional abilities according to the severity of the phenotype. Similar findings were also observed on the Hammersmith Infant Neurological Examination.ConclusionsOur findings confirm that, after the age of 2 years, patients with type 1 spinal muscular atrophy generally survive only if they have gastrostomy and tracheostomy or noninvasive ventilation >16 hours and have low scores on the functional scales. More variability, however, can be expected in those with the mildest phenotype, who achieve head control. These data provide important baseline information at the time treatments are becoming available.
- Published
- 2018
14. Functional levels and MRI patterns of muscle involvement in upper limbs in Duchenne muscular dystrophy
- Author
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Lara Cristiano, Giorgia Coratti, Roberto De Santis, Nicola Forcina, Giorgio Tasca, Giulia Norcia, Claudia Brogna, Sara Carnicella, Cesare Colosimo, Eugenio Mercuri, Tommaso Tartaglione, Roberta Battini, Tommaso Verdolotti, Marika Pane, Pierre G. Carlier, Luana Ficociello, and Lavinia Fanelli
- Subjects
030506 rehabilitation ,Muscle Physiology ,Heredity ,Muscle Functions ,Physiology ,Genetic Linkage ,Duchenne muscular dystrophy ,lcsh:Medicine ,Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy ,Biceps ,Muscular Dystrophies ,Diagnostic Radiology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Triceps ,Muscular dystrophy ,lcsh:Science ,Child ,10. No inequality ,Musculoskeletal System ,Forearms ,Multidisciplinary ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Muscles ,Radiology and Imaging ,Anatomy ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Arms ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,X-Linked Traits ,Sex Linkage ,Child, Preschool ,Upper limb ,Brachialis ,0305 other medical science ,Research Article ,Adult ,Adolescent ,Imaging Techniques ,Brachioradialis ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Upper Extremity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Settore MED/39 - NEUROPSICHIATRIA INFANTILE ,Forearm ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Clinical Genetics ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Limbs (Anatomy) ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.disease ,Duchenne ,Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne ,Shoulders ,Rotator Cuff Muscles ,lcsh:Q ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The aim of the study was to evaluate the spectrum of upper limb functional activities and imaging finding in a cohort of patients affected by Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Thirty-one patients of age between 5 and 29 years were included in the study (17 ambulant and 14 non-ambulant). They were all assessed using the Performance of Upper Limb (PUL) test and muscle MRI of shoulder, arm and forearm in order to establish if the functional scores obtained at shoulder, mid and distal level related to specific patterns of involvement in each upper limb segment on muscle MRI. At shoulder level, latissimus dorsi, serratus anterior, infraspinatus and subscapularis were always involved, even in patients with full functional scores at shoulder level. Diffuse and severe involvement of all muscles was found in the patients with a PUL shoulder functional score of ≤ 5. At arm level biceps brachii, brachialis and triceps were generally concordantly involved or spared. Some degree of involvement could already be detected in patients with reduced scores on the PUL mid domain. They were generally severely involved in patients with functional scores less than 6 at mid-level. At distal level supinator and pronator muscles were often involved, followed by brachioradialis and, less frequently, by the muscles of the flexor compartment. The extensor muscles were generally completely spared. A diffuse and severe involvement was found only in patients who had very low scores (8 or below) on the PUL distal domain. The integrated use of functional scales and imaging allowed to establish patterns of involvement at each level, and the functional scores that were more frequently associated with diffuse and severe involvement.
- Published
- 2018
15. P.222Long term progression in type II spinal muscular atrophy: a retrospective observational study
- Author
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Nicola Forcina, Sara Carnicella, Annalia Frongia, Marika Pane, Eugenio Mercuri, E. Mazzone, Simona Lucibello, Laura Antonaci, Maria Carmela Pera, R. De Sanctis, Giulia Norcia, Giorgia Coratti, and Lavinia Fanelli
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,Spinal muscular atrophy type II ,Term (time) ,Settore MED/39 - NEUROPSICHIATRIA INFANTILE ,Neurology ,natural history ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Genetics (clinical) ,spinal muscular atrophy - Published
- 2019
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