81 results on '"Stegagno, L."'
Search Results
2. Intelligence and psychopathy: a correlational study on insane female offenders
- Author
-
Spironelli, C., Segrè, D., Stegagno, L., and Angrilli, A.
- Published
- 2014
3. Cardiac autonomic profile during daytime sleep in healthy young adults
- Author
-
Cellini, Nicola, Torre, Jacopo, Stegagno, L, and Sarlo, Michela
- Published
- 2016
4. Language lateralization in dyslexic children: an EEG mapping study
- Author
-
Angrilli, A, Penolazzi, B, DI COLA, A, Stegagno, L, Angrilli, A, Penolazzi, B, DI COLA, A, and Stegagno, L
- Published
- 2003
5. Sleep onset and cardiovascular activity in primary insomnia
- Author
-
DE ZAMBOTTI, Massimiliano, Covassin, N, DE MIN TONA, G, Sarlo, Michela, and Stegagno, L.
- Subjects
hyperarousal ,Impedance cardiography ,cardiovascular system ,primary insomnia ,sleep onset - Published
- 2011
6. Cortical brain responses to semantic incongruity and syntactic violation in Italian language: an event related potential study
- Author
-
Angrilli, A., Penolazzi, B., Vespignani, Francesco, De Vincenzi, M., Job, Remo, Ciccarelli, L., Palomba, D., and Stegagno, L.
- Published
- 2002
7. Intelligence and psychopathy: a correlational study on insane female offenders
- Author
-
Spironelli, C., primary, Segrè, D., additional, Stegagno, L., additional, and Angrilli, A., additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Nighttime cardiac sympathetic hyper-activation in young primary insomniacs
- Author
-
de Zambotti, M., primary, Covassin, N., additional, Sarlo, M., additional, De Min Tona, G., additional, Trinder, J., additional, and Stegagno, L., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. P03-135 - Delta and Gamma EEG Bands as Markers of Left Hypofrontality for Language in Schizophrenia Patients
- Author
-
Spironelli, C., primary, Stegagno, L., additional, and Angrilli, A., additional
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Delta EEG Band as a Marker of Left Hypofrontality for Language in Schizophrenia Patients
- Author
-
Spironelli, C., primary, Angrilli, A., additional, Calogero, A., additional, and Stegagno, L., additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Emotional impairment after right orbitofrontal lesion in a patient without cognitive deficits
- Author
-
Angrilli, A, Palomba, D, Cantagallo, A, Maietti, Alessandra, Stegagno, L, Maietti, A (ORCID:0000-0002-9819-7037), Angrilli, A, Palomba, D, Cantagallo, A, Maietti, Alessandra, Stegagno, L, and Maietti, A (ORCID:0000-0002-9819-7037)
- Abstract
THE present study describes a patient, M.L., with right orbitofrontal lesion, who showed no impairment on main neuropsychological tests, including those measuring frontal functions. Nevertheless, he had deeply affected emotional responses. In line with Damasio's work, the patient had lower skin conductance during the projection of a standardized set of emotional slides. Furthermore, he showed altered facial expressions to unpleasant emotions, displaying low corrugator supercilii electromyographical activity associated with reduced recall of unpleasant stimuli. During a task focusing on imagery of emotional situations, M.L.'s heart rate and skin conductance responses were affected during both pleasant and unpleasant conditions. Facial expressions to unpleasant imagery scripts were also impaired. Thus, the orbitofrontal cortex proved to play a critical role in retrieval of psychophysiological emotional patterns, particularly to unpleasant material. These results provide the first evidence that orbitofrontal lesions are associated with emotional impairment at several psychophysiological levels. NeuroReport 10:1741-1746 (C) 1999 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
- Published
- 1999
12. Nighttime cardiac sympathetic hyper-activation in young primary insomniacs.
- Author
-
Zambotti, M., Covassin, N., Sarlo, M., Min Tona, G., Trinder, J., and Stegagno, L.
- Subjects
INSOMNIA ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases risk factors ,POLYSOMNOGRAPHY ,CARDIOGRAPHY ,HEART beat measurement ,CARDIAC output - Abstract
Purpose: A growing literature supports the association between insomnia and cardiovascular risk. Since only few studies have provided empirical evidence of hyper-activation of the cardiovascular system in insomniacs, the aim of the present study was to analyze cardiac autonomic responses in primary insomnia. Methods: Impedance cardiography and heart rate variability (HRV) measures were assessed in 9 insomniacs and 9 good sleepers during a night of polysomnographic recording. Results: Insomniacs were found to be characterized by a constant sympathetic hyper-activation which was maintained all night, as suggested by a faster pre-ejection period (PEP) compared to good sleepers. In addition, only insomniacs showed a strong reduction in heart rate in the transition from wake to sleep. Both groups exhibited a reduction in cardiac output and sympathovagal balance, i.e., reductions in low-frequency/high-frequency ratio and increases in high-frequency normalized units of HRV, across the night. In addition, in our sample, a high physiological sympathetic activation (fast PEP) at night was found to be directly associated with low quality of sleep. Conclusions: These preliminary findings suggest that a constant cardiac sympathetic hyper-activation throughout the night is a main feature of primary insomnia. Our evidences support the association between insomnia and increased risk for cardiovascular diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Nocturnal cardiovascular activity in essential hypotension: evidence of differential autonomic regulation.
- Author
-
Covassin N, de Zambotti M, Cellini N, Sarlo M, and Stegagno L
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Failure of language lateralization in schizophrenia patients: an ERP study on early linguistic components.
- Author
-
Spironelli C, Angrilli A, and Stegagno L
- Abstract
Objective: In line with Crow's hypothesis, altered hemispheric lateralization of language would cause the main symptoms of schizophrenia. The present experiment aimed to demonstrate the loss of the hemispheric specialization for linguistic processing in schizophrenia patients at the level of early automatic evoked potentials (N150). Methods: A sample of 10 outpatients with schizophrenia treated with low levels of neuroleptics and 10 matched healthy control subjects were administered 3 linguistic tasks based on stimulus pair comparisons (phonological, semantic and wordDSpicture matching tasks). Laterality scores of early evoked potentials were analyzed during 2 time windows corresponding to the N150- and N400-like components. Results: The patients failed to develop the typical left hemispheric N150 component evoked by the first word (S1), which was consistently achieved by the healthy control group in posterior sites (p < 0.01). The effect was specific and stable for linguistic stimuli. As well, for the N150 elicited by the target stimulus (S2), the patients exhibited a lack of linguistic lateralization. In the control task (wordDSpicture matching task), in which S2 was a picture, the 2 groups revealed very similar bilateral recognition potentials. Conclusion: The results point to a failure of language lateralization in patients with schizophrenia, a deficit involving those linguistic networks automatically activated in the earliest phase of word recognition (N150). Consistent with the current view of schizophrenia, this finding may be related to lack of integration among specific processes and reduced interconnection of underlying linguistic networks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
15. Slow Cortical Potentials in Subjects With High or Low Scores on a Questionnaire Measuring Physical Anhedonia and Body Image Distortion.
- Author
-
Lutzenberger, W., Elbert, T., Rockstroh, B., Birbaumer, N., and Stegagno, L.
- Subjects
SCIENTIFIC experimentation ,ANHEDONIA ,EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
Slow cortical potentials, response speed, and peripheral physiological responses were investigated in two experiments with four groups of male subjects. Experiment 1 examined constant foreperiod reaction time in a sound light button press sequence with an interstimulus interval of 2 sec. Experiment 2 investigated constant foreperiod reaction time conditions with a sudden change from controllable to uncontrollable offset of an aversive imperative stimulus. There were two visual warning stimuli of 6-sec duration followed by an aversive or neutral imperative stimulus to be terminated by button press within I sec. Forty trials of this contingency were followed by 40 trials with 5-sec duration of imperative stimuli irrespective of response speed. Subjects were selected by high or low scores on two questionnaire scales measuring physical anhedonia (PA) and body image distortion (BI). In the first paradigm subjects with high PA scores as compared to low-scoring subjects showed less resolution of left precentral CNV after S2, i.e., a more pronounced post-imperative negative component. In the second paradigm a postimperative negative variation (PINV) developed in all groups, but was more pronounced in frontal recordings and in subjects with high PA and BI scores. Results are discussed in the context of electrocortical phenomena observed in psychopathological groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. EEG brain mapping of phonological and semantic tasks in Italian and German languages
- Author
-
Angrilli, A., Dobel, C., Rockstroh, B., Stegagno, L., and Elbert, T.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Failure of language lateralization in schizophrenia patients: An ERP study on early linguistic components
- Author
-
Chiara Spironelli, Angrilli, A., and Stegagno, L.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Language Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,Language ,Hemispheric asymmetry ,Evoked potentials ,Recognition potential ,N150 ,Age Factors ,Brain ,Electroencephalography ,Linguistics ,Middle Aged ,Functional Laterality ,Reaction Time ,Humans ,Female ,Evoked Potentials ,Aged ,Antipsychotic Agents ,Research Paper - Abstract
In line with Crow's hypothesis, altered hemispheric lateralization of language would cause the main symptoms of schizophrenia. The present experiment aimed to demonstrate the loss of the hemispheric specialization for linguistic processing in schizophrenia patients at the level of early automatic evoked potentials (N150).A sample of 10 outpatients with schizophrenia treated with low levels of neuroleptics and 10 matched healthy control subjects were administered 3 linguistic tasks based on stimulus pair comparisons (phonological, semantic and word-picture matching tasks). Laterality scores of early evoked potentials were analyzed during 2 time windows corresponding to the N150- and N400-like components.The patients failed to develop the typical left hemispheric N150 component evoked by the first word (S1), which was consistently achieved by the healthy control group in posterior sites (p0.01). The effect was specific and stable for linguistic stimuli. As well, for the N150 elicited by the target stimulus (S2), the patients exhibited a lack of linguistic lateralization. In the control task (word-picture matching task), in which S2 was a picture, the 2 groups revealed very similar bilateral recognition potentials.The results point to a failure of language lateralization in patients with schizophrenia, a deficit involving those linguistic networks automatically activated in the earliest phase of word recognition (N150). Consistent with the current view of schizophrenia, this finding may be related to lack of integration among specific processes and reduced interconnection of underlying linguistic networks.
18. Arousal, perceived arousal and emotions
- Author
-
Battacchi, M.W., primary, Palomba, D., additional, Stegagno, L., additional, and Baldaro, B., additional
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Biofeedback-assisted heart rate modification after myocardial infarction
- Author
-
Palomba, D., primary, Stegagno, L., additional, and Zanchi, C., additional
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Effects of sleep reduction on spatial attention
- Author
-
Luciano Stegagno, Corrado Cavallero, Manola Mozzato, Giuliano De Min Tona, Francesco Versace, Versace, F., Cavallero, Corrado, DE MIN TONA, G., Mozzato, M., and Stegagno, L.
- Subjects
Sleep reduction ,Attention ,Orienting ,Alertness ,Vigilance ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Polysomnography ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Audiology ,Developmental psychology ,sleep reduction ,attention ,orienting ,Reference Values ,Orientation ,Reaction Time ,medicine ,Humans ,Circadian rhythm ,media_common ,Cued speech ,General Neuroscience ,Space perception ,Circadian Rhythm ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Sleep Deprivation ,Female ,Sleep Stages ,Cues ,Arousal ,Psychology ,Color Perception ,Psychomotor Performance ,Vigilance (psychology) ,Sleep loss - Abstract
To investigate the effects exerted by sleep loss on specific attentive components the performance to a simple reaction time task and to a cued reaction time task were recorded at regular intervals during days following either 8 or 3 h of uninterrupted sleep. Eleven subjects took part in the experiment. The results show that, notwithstanding a general reduction of alertness produced by sleep curtailment (as indicated by the increase of reaction times in the simple reaction time task), in the cued reaction time task only the reaction times to invalidly cued targets significantly increase, while no difference is observed when attention is summoned by a valid cue. This result suggests that the mechanisms underlying orienting of attention are differentially affected by the reduction of alertness level.
- Published
- 2006
21. Selectively attending to natural scenes after alcohol consumption: an ERP analysis
- Author
-
Luciano Stegagno, Harald T. Schupp, Maurizio Codispoti, Andrea De Cesarei, De Cesarei A., Codispoti M., Schupp HT., and Stegagno L.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Alcohol Drinking ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Electroencephalography ,Environment ,Alcohol ,Attention ,Motivation ,ERPs ,Natural scenes ,Developmental psychology ,Alcohol intoxication ,Cognition ,ddc:150 ,motivation ,Perception ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,natural scenes ,medicine ,Humans ,Levels-of-processing effect ,Evoked Potentials ,media_common ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Ethanol ,alcohol ,Working memory ,General Neuroscience ,Information processing ,Brain ,Central Nervous System Depressants ,medicine.disease ,attention ,Affect ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Categorization ,Female ,Cues ,Psychology ,ERP - Abstract
Alcohol effects on cognitive, emotional and behavioral processes have been linked to an impairment of attention. Because attention operates at the level of specific cognitive subsystems, recent studies demonstrated alcohol effects in specific post-perceptual processes such as response selection and working memory. Measuring event-related potentials, the present study focused on perceptual processes by utilizing a categorization task where participants had to decide whether briefly presented images contained an animal or not. Findings demonstrate an early differential ERP activity for target compared to non-target images, which was reduced after alcohol intoxication. Thus, alcohol intoxication had deleterious effects at the perceptual level of processing considered to reflect the interaction of top-down (category-related) and bottom-up (stimulus-driven) processes. In addition, post-perceptual processes were also impaired by alcohol intoxication.
- Published
- 2005
22. Heart rate variability during sleep as a function of the sleep cycle
- Author
-
Luciano Stegagno, Corrado Cavallero, Manola Mozzato, Francesco Versace, Giuliano De Min Tona, Versace, F., Mozzato, M., DE MIN TONA, G., Cavallero, Corrado, and Stegagno, L.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Periodicity ,Sleep, REM ,Parasympathetic nervous system ,Sleep spindle ,Polysomnography ,Spectral analysis ,Audiology ,Autonomic Nervous System ,Sleep ,Sleep cycle ,Heart rate variability ,Sympathetic nervous system ,Non-rapid eye movement sleep ,Heart Rate ,mental disorders ,Heart rate ,medicine ,Humans ,Slow-wave sleep ,Sleep Stages ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology ,General Neuroscience ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Female ,K-complex ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
In this work, in order to evaluate whether autonomic differences distinguish REM sleep and NREM sleep through the whole sleeping period, statistical analysis on spectral power associated with low frequency and high frequency bands were performed on the whole polysomnographic recording, considering the sleep cycle as a unit of sleep. Our results from nine subjects show that power associated with low frequency is higher in REM sleep than in NREM sleep, while power associated with high frequency is significantly higher in NREM sleep than in REM sleep. Differences between REM sleep and NREM sleep are not of the same magnitude within the whole sleep episode and, independent of sleep stages, specific trends are observable in the autonomic control of heart rate during the night.
- Published
- 2003
23. Emotional information processing in patients with narcolepsy: a psychophysiologic investigation
- Author
-
Giuseppe Plazzi, Daniela Palomba, Luigi Ferini-Strambi, Valter Tucci, Luciano Stegagno, Pasquale Montagna, Franco Ferrillo, Stefano Vandi, Luca Vignatelli, Tucci, V, Stegagno, L, Vandi, S, Ferrillo, F, Palomba, D, Vignatelli, L, FERINI STRAMBI, Luigi, Montagna, P, and Plazzi, G.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cataplexy ,Emotional information processing ,Emotional pictures ,Narcolepsy ,Psychophysiology ,emotional pictures ,Audiology ,emotional information processing ,Arousal ,Perceptual Disorders ,Event-related potential ,Heart Rate ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Humans ,Valence (psychology) ,narcolepsy ,cataplexy ,psychophysiology ,International Affective Picture System ,Aged ,Electromyography ,Cognition ,Electroencephalography ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Facial Expression ,Affect ,Electrooculography ,Anesthesia ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology - Abstract
Objectives: Cataplexy is the key symptom of the narcoleptic syndrome. It is usually triggered by emotions, which play an important role in the manifestation and severity of the disease. Accordingly, we compared the psychophysiologic effects on patients with narcolepsy and healthy subjects of processing visual stimuli that have established emotional valences. Method: Eight drug-free patients with narcolepsy with severe cataplexy and 8 controls were studied. Fifty-four color pictures (pleasant, neutral, and unpleasant) selected from the International Affective Picture System were presented on a monitor to the subjects. The effects of exposure to the pictures were assessed in muscular (corrugator, zygomatic and mylohyoid electromyographic activity), autonomic (blood pressure, heart rate, and skin conductance responses) cognitive (scalp-recorded event-related potentials), and subjective (valence, arousal, and dominance by Self-Assessment Manikin) systems. Results: The autonomic, muscular, and cognitive systems showed an attenuated reaction to visual stimuli in patients compared to controls. Furthermore, patients with narcolepsy showed the lowest responses when unpleasant pictures were presented. Conclusions: Our data suggest that, compared to the group of healthy subjects, patients with narcolepsy suffer from a temporal disadvantage in input processing, in particular, of unpleasant stimuli. The drawback exhibited by these patients suggests reduced reactivity of the aversive motivational system responsible for negative or unpleasant emotions.
- Published
- 2003
24. Not All Competitions Come to Harm! Competitive Biofeedback to Increase Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia in Managers.
- Author
-
Patron E, Munafò M, Messerotti Benvenuti S, Stegagno L, and Palomba D
- Abstract
Despite the positive impact on achievement, competition has been associated with elevated psychophysiological activation, potentially leading to a greater risk of cardiovascular diseases. Competitive biofeedback (BF) can be used to highlight the effects of competition on the same physiological responses that are going to be controlled through BF. However, it is still unknown whether competition could enhance the effects of respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA)-BF training in improving cardiac vagal control. The present study explored whether competitive RSA-BF could be more effective than non-competitive RSA-BF in increasing RSA in executive managers, who are at higher cardiovascular risk of being commonly exposed to highly competitive conditions. Thirty managers leading outstanding private or public companies were randomly assigned to either a Competition ( n = 14) or a Control ( n = 16) RSA-BF training lasting five weekly sessions. Managers in the Competition group underwent the RSA-BF in couples and each participant was requested to produce a better performance (i.e., higher RSA) than the paired challenger. After the training, results showed that managers in the Competition group succeeded in increasing cardiac vagal control, as supported by the specific increase in RSA ( p < 0.001), the standard deviation of R-R wave intervals (SDNN; p < 0.001), and root mean square of the successive differences between adjacent heartbeats (rMSSD; p < 0.001). A significant increase in the percentage of successive normal sinus beat to beat intervals more than 50 ms (pNN50; p = 0.023; η
2 p = 0.17), low frequency ( p = ≤ 0.001; η2 p = 0.44), and high frequency power ( p = 0.005; η2 p = 0.25) emerged independently from the competitive condition. Intriguingly, managers who compete showed the same reduction in resting heart rate (HR; p = 0.003, η2 p = 0.28), systolic blood pressure (SBP; p = 0.013, η2 p = 0.20), respiration rate (p < 0.001; η2 p = 0.46), and skin conductance level (SCL; p = 0.001, η2 p = 0.32) as non-competitive participants. Also, the same reduction in social anxiety ( p = 0.005; η2 p = 0.25), state ( p = 0.038, η2 p = 0.14) and trait anxiety ( p = 0.001, η2 p = 0.31), and depressive symptoms ( p = 0.023, η2 p = 0.17) emerged in the two groups. The present results showed that managers competing for increasing RSA showed a greater improvement in their parasympathetic modulation than non-competing managers. Most importantly, competition did not lead to the classic pattern of increased psychophysiological activation under competitive RSA-BF. Therefore, competition could facilitate the use of self-regulation strategies, especially in highly competitive individuals, to promote adaptive responses to psychological stress., (Copyright © 2020 Patron, Munafò, Messerotti Benvenuti, Stegagno and Palomba.)- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Cardiac autonomic activity during daytime nap in young adults.
- Author
-
Cellini N, Torre J, Stegagno L, and Sarlo M
- Subjects
- Adult, Autonomic Nervous System physiology, Electrocardiography methods, Electrocardiography trends, Female, Finland epidemiology, Humans, Male, Polysomnography trends, Sleep physiology, Young Adult, Heart Rate physiology, Polysomnography methods, Sleep Latency physiology, Sleep Stages physiology, Wakefulness physiology
- Abstract
The current study investigated both sympathetic and vagal autonomic patterns during a daytime sleep in 25 healthy adults (23.2 ± 2.4 years). Pre-ejection period (PEP; related inversely to beta-adrenergic sympathetic activity), the interval between consecutive R-waves (RR) and frequency-domain heart rate variability (HRV) were computed during pre-nap wakefulness and undisturbed sleep stages. Results showed sleep-related changes in RR and HRV measures, whereas PEP decreased significantly from pre-nap to sleep, showing no differences across sleep stages. Moreover, pre-nap PEP and HFnu (the normalized unit of the high-frequency component of HRV) were associated negatively with sleep latency and wake after sleep onset. These results indicate a marked autonomic output reduction during daytime sleep, with different stage-dependent fluctuations for sympathetic and vagal activity. Importantly, pre-nap autonomic activity seems to modulate subsequent sleep quality., (© 2017 European Sleep Research Society.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Sleep before and after learning promotes the consolidation of both neutral and emotional information regardless of REM presence.
- Author
-
Cellini N, Torre J, Stegagno L, and Sarlo M
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Sleep, REM physiology, Time Factors, Wakefulness physiology, Young Adult, Emotions physiology, Memory Consolidation physiology, Sleep physiology
- Abstract
Sleep may play a role in consolidating emotional memories. However, studies on the effects of REM sleep on negative vs. neutral memories have produced inconsistent evidence. Here, we assess the role of NREM and REM sleep before and after learning in promoting the consolidation of neutral and arousing pleasant and unpleasant memories. Forty-six (32 F) healthy university students were exposed to a set of pictures at 1:00PM (Session 1) and to an equivalent set at 4:45PM (Session 2). All the pictures in Session 1 and Session 2 were presented again, intermixed with new similar pictures at 5:15PM in a memory recognition task. Following Session 1, participants took a 90/120-min nap (NAP group), while 16 participants remained awake (WAKE group). Via polysomnographic recording, the NAP group was segregated into REM (N=14) and NoREM groups (N=16). Indices of memory consolidation for both stimuli presented before (discriminability of Session 1 pictures in Session 3) and after sleep (discriminability of Session 2 pictures in Session 3) were calculated. Memory consolidation for pictures presented both before and after the sleep period was higher in the NAP group as compared to the WAKE group, but no differential role of REM sleep emerged. A memory consolidation advantage was evident for neutral over pleasant (but not unpleasant) pictures. Taken together, these results indicate that a daytime nap (with or without REM sleep) facilitates consolidation of declarative memories presented before and after sleep irrespective of their valence., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Reduced cerebral and cardiovascular hemodynamics during sustained affective stimulation in young women with chronic low blood pressure.
- Author
-
Cellini N, de Zambotti M, Covassin N, Gallicchio G, Stegagno L, and Sarlo M
- Subjects
- Adult, Analysis of Variance, Blood Flow Velocity physiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Chronic Disease, Female, Heart Rate physiology, Humans, Linear Models, Photic Stimulation, Time Factors, Young Adult, Cerebrovascular Circulation, Emotions physiology, Hemodynamics physiology, Hypotension physiopathology
- Abstract
Although low blood pressure has been associated with lower affect and higher depressive symptoms in the elderly, the presence of possible impairment in emotional reactivity in chronic hypotensive individuals in early adulthood remains largely unexplored. Using a combination of transcranial Doppler sonography, beat-to-beat blood pressure recording and impedance cardiography we assessed central and peripheral hemodynamic changes in 15 undergraduate women with chronic hypotension (Age: 23.9 ± 2.7 years) and 15 normotensive controls (Age: 23.7 ± 3.1 years) during sustained exposure to pleasant, unpleasant and neutral pictures. Overall, systolic blood pressure (SBP) increased in normotensives and decreased in hypotensives during picture viewing as compared to baseline. Also, compared to normotensives, in hypotensives mean cerebral blood flow velocity increased to a lesser extent during the viewing of pleasant pictures and the magnitude of this increase was negatively associated with subjective emotional arousal. In addition, in hypotensives screening SBP was positively associated with valence rating of pleasant contents. These findings indicate a close association between chronic low blood pressure and reduced processing of pleasant stimuli in young adulthood., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Impaired off-line motor skills consolidation in young primary insomniacs.
- Author
-
Cellini N, de Zambotti M, Covassin N, Sarlo M, and Stegagno L
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Polysomnography, Young Adult, Memory physiology, Motor Skills physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders physiopathology, Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders psychology
- Abstract
Compelling evidence indicates that sleep can facilitate the off-line consolidation of declarative, perceptual, emotional and procedural memories. Here we assessed the sleep-related off-line consolidation of motor skills in 13 young primary insomniacs (23.31±2.5 yrs) compared to 13 healthy sleepers (24.31±1.6 yrs) using the sequential finger tapping task. During a training session insomniacs performed less correct sequences than controls. However, both groups exhibited similar on-line motor learning in the pre-sleep evening session. After a night of sleep, healthy controls improved their performance, indicating an overnight effect of sleep on motor skills consolidation. In contrast, insomniacs failed to exhibit a sleep-related enhancement in memory performance indicating impairment in the off-line motor skills consolidation process. Our results suggest that young adults with insomnia experience impaired off-line memory consolidation which seems not to be associated with reduced ability to acquire new motor information., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Nocturnal cardiac autonomic profile in young primary insomniacs and good sleepers.
- Author
-
de Zambotti M, Cellini N, Baker FC, Colrain IM, Sarlo M, and Stegagno L
- Subjects
- Adult, Analysis of Variance, Cardiography, Impedance, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Male, Polysomnography, Time Factors, Young Adult, Autonomic Nervous System physiopathology, Heart Rate physiology, Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders pathology, Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders physiopathology, Sleep Stages physiology
- Abstract
We investigated cardiac vagal and sympathetic activity in 13 young primary insomniacs (PI; 24.4±1.6years) and 14 good sleepers (GS; 23.3±2.5years) during nocturnal sleep. Pre-ejection period (PEP; inversely related to beta-adrenergic sympathetic activity), interval between consecutive R-waves (RR), and vagal-related indices of time- and frequency-domain heart rate variability were computed during pre-sleep wakefulness and undisturbed arousal-free sleep stages (N2, SWS, REM) as well as across the whole night irrespective of the presence of disruptive sleep events (e.g. sleep arousals/awakenings) and/or sleep stage transitions. Groups exhibited a similar vagal activity throughout each undisturbed sleep stage as well as considering the whole night, with a higher modulation during sleep compared to prior wakefulness. However, PEP was constantly shorter (higher sympathetic activity) during pre-sleep wakefulness and each sleep stage in PI compared to GS. Moreover, pre-sleep RR intervals were positively associated with sleep efficiency and negatively associated with wake after sleep onset in PI. Altogether our findings indicated a dysfunctional sympathetic activity but a normal parasympathetic modulation before and during sleep in young adults with insomnia., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Facing emotions in narcolepsy with cataplexy: haemodynamic and behavioural responses during emotional stimulation.
- Author
-
de Zambotti M, Pizza F, Covassin N, Vandi S, Cellini N, Stegagno L, and Plazzi G
- Subjects
- Adult, Affect, Arousal physiology, Case-Control Studies, Female, Functional Laterality physiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Self Report, Sleep physiology, Young Adult, Adaptation, Psychological, Blood Pressure physiology, Cataplexy physiopathology, Cataplexy psychology, Emotions, Heart Rate physiology
- Abstract
Narcolepsy with cataplexy is a complex sleep disorder that affects the modulation of emotions: cataplexy, the key symptom of narcolepsy, is indeed strongly linked with emotions that usually trigger the episodes. Our study aimed to investigate haemodynamic and behavioural responses during emotional stimulation in narco-cataplexy. Twelve adult drug-naive narcoleptic patients (five males; age: 33.3 ± 9.4 years) and 12 healthy controls (five males; age: 30.9 ± 9.5 years) were exposed to emotional stimuli (pleasant, unpleasant and neutral pictures). Heart rate, arterial blood pressure and mean cerebral blood flow velocity of the middle cerebral arteries were continuously recorded using photoplethysmography and Doppler ultrasound. Ratings of valence and arousal and coping strategies were scored by the Self-Assessment Manikin and by questionnaires, respectively. Narcoleptic patients' haemodynamic responses to pictures overlapped with the data obtained from controls: decrease of heart rate and increase of mean cerebral blood flow velocity regardless of pictures' content, increase of systolic blood pressure during the pleasant condition, and relative reduction of heart rate during pleasant and unpleasant conditions. However, when compared with controls, narcoleptic patients reported lower arousal scores during the pleasant and neutral stimulation, and lower valence scores during the pleasant condition, respectively, and also a lower score at the 'focus on and venting of emotions' dimensions of coping. Our results suggested that adult narcoleptic patients, compared with healthy controls, inhibited their emotion-expressive behaviour to emotional stimulation, and that may be related to the development of adaptive cognitive strategies to face emotions avoiding cataplexy., (© 2014 European Sleep Research Society.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Working memory impairment and cardiovascular hyperarousal in young primary insomniacs.
- Author
-
Cellini N, de Zambotti M, Covassin N, Sarlo M, and Stegagno L
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Memory Disorders etiology, Polysomnography, Psychomotor Performance, Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders complications, Young Adult, Hemodynamics, Memory Disorders physiopathology, Memory Disorders psychology, Memory, Short-Term, Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders physiopathology, Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders psychology
- Abstract
We investigated memory performance and cardiovascular activity in 13 primary insomniacs (PI) compared to 13 good sleepers (GS). Cardiovascular and hemodynamic measures, including heart rate, pre-ejection period, and blood pressure, were continuously recorded at rest and during two memory tasks. PI showed working memory impairment under high cognitive load, but performed as well as GS in an easy memory task. In addition, PI exhibited markers of hyperarousal both at rest and during the execution of the two tasks. However, we failed to find a clear-cut relationship between cardiovascular hyperarousal and cognitive performance in insomniacs. Our data provide further evidence of both cognitive impairment and cardiovascular hyperarousal in primary insomnia, while not supporting the hypothesis of hyperarousal as a compensatory mechanism to overcome cognitive challenges.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Cardiovascular down-regulation in essential hypotension: relationships with autonomic control and sleep.
- Author
-
Covassin N, de Zambotti M, Cellini N, Sarlo M, and Stegagno L
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Mathematics, Polysomnography, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Young Adult, Autonomic Nervous System physiology, Cardiovascular Physiological Phenomena, Down-Regulation physiology, Hemodynamics physiology, Hypotension physiopathology, Sleep physiology
- Abstract
In this work, we aimed to clarify the autonomic involvement in the cardiovascular down-regulation in essential hypotension. The relationships between cardiovascular response and sleep quality were also examined. Thirteen female hypotensives and 13 female normotensives performed a stress task followed by polysomnography. Measures derived from blood pressure monitoring, impedance cardiography, and heart rate variability were collected. Hypotensives exhibited lower cardiovascular and autonomic activation than controls during the task. While a better sleep quality (i.e., higher sleep efficiency and lower nocturnal wakefulness) correlated with a reduced reactivity in normotensives, the opposite pattern occurred in hypotensives. The results suggest that a blunted response in both autonomic branches underlies the cardiovascular hypoactivation in hypotension. Further, good sleep seems to be associated with optimal levels of physiological reactivity., (Copyright © 2013 Society for Psychophysiological Research.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Polysomnographic validation of a wireless dry headband technology for sleep monitoring in healthy young adults.
- Author
-
Tonetti L, Cellini N, de Zambotti M, Fabbri M, Martoni M, Fábregas SE, Stegagno L, and Natale V
- Subjects
- Data Interpretation, Statistical, Female, Humans, Male, Reproducibility of Results, Sleep Stages physiology, Sleep, REM physiology, Young Adult, Polysomnography instrumentation, Sleep physiology, Wireless Technology
- Abstract
The present study aimed to explore the validity and reliability of a wireless dry headband technology for sleep monitoring (WS), through a comparison with concurrent polysomnographic (PSG) recording in healthy young adults. Eleven volunteers (7 females; mean age±SD: 24.75±3.62years) took part in the study, wearing the WS for two overnight PSG recordings in the sleep laboratory. The WS was compared to PSG in the identification of wake, light, deep and REM sleep. The WS sensitivity and specificity were 97.6% and 56.1%, respectively. The WS agreement with PSG, measured by Cohen's kappa, was 0.56 for light sleep, 0.70 for deep sleep, and 0.67 for REM sleep. The present results showed that the agreement ranged from moderate to high between PSG and the WS, while wakefulness detection was observed to be a limitation of the WS., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Relationship between cardiovascular resting state and visual attention.
- Author
-
Cellini N, Covassin N, de Zambotti M, Sarlo M, and Stegagno L
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Young Adult, Attention physiology, Autonomic Nervous System physiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Heart Rate physiology, Hypotension physiopathology, Visual Perception
- Abstract
Introduction: Cardiovascular features seem to modulate performance in attention tasks., Methods: We investigated the relationship between blood pressure, resting heart rate and heart rate variability (HRV) and performance in a visuospatial attention task comparing normotensive and hypotensive young adults., Conclusions: We found an association between resting HRV and visual attention performance only in the normotensive group. In addition, we provided a further evidence of attention impairment in hypotensive individuals.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Impaired cerebral and systemic hemodynamics under cognitive load in young hypotensives: a transcranial Doppler study.
- Author
-
Sarlo M, de Zambotti M, Gallicchio G, Devigili A, and Stegagno L
- Subjects
- Adult, Blood Flow Velocity physiology, Blood Pressure, Case-Control Studies, Female, Homeostasis physiology, Humans, Hypotension diagnostic imaging, Hypotension psychology, Memory, Short-Term physiology, Middle Cerebral Artery diagnostic imaging, Middle Cerebral Artery physiopathology, Ultrasonography, Cerebrovascular Circulation, Cognition physiology, Hemodynamics, Hypotension physiopathology
- Abstract
Reduced sympathetic outflow and deficits in cerebral hemodynamics have been considered as possible factors mediating the impaired cognitive performance in essential hypotension. However, the relationship between systemic blood pressure (BP), cerebral blood flow and cognitive functioning is still poorly understood. The present study was aimed at clarifying the physiological processes underlying cerebral and systemic hemodynamics in young hypotensives during cognitive engagement. Doppler sonography blood flow velocities in both middle cerebral arteries were measured from 17 hypotensives and 15 normotensives during a working memory task. Impedance cardiographic and BP measures were also recorded continuously. Lower increases in systolic and diastolic BP were observed in hypotensives. However, no evidence of lower sympathetic control was found for this group, as assessed by pre-ejection period. Flow velocity in middle cerebral arteries showed a lower increase in hypotensives throughout the task. Moreover, significant positive correlations between BP changes and blood flow velocities in middle cerebral arteries during the task were obtained for this group only, suggesting a less effective cerebral autoregulation. No difference was found between groups in task performance. Results suggest that during cognitive challenge hypotensives show impaired hemodynamic adjustments, both central and peripheral. However, such alterations do not directly affect cognitive performance, at least under moderate cognitive load.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Hemodynamic and autonomic modifications during sleep stages in young hypotensive women.
- Author
-
de Zambotti M, Covassin N, Cellini N, Sarlo M, Torre J, and Stegagno L
- Subjects
- Adult, Blood Pressure physiology, Female, Heart Rate physiology, Humans, Autonomic Nervous System physiopathology, Hemodynamics physiology, Hypotension physiopathology, Sleep Stages physiology
- Abstract
This study examined cardiovascular activity and autonomic involvement during sleep in essential hypotension. We compared young female hypotensives and normotensives using ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, impedance cardiography, and frequency-domain analysis of heart rate variability during a night of polysomnographic recording. Hypotensives, as compared to normotensives, exhibited lower blood pressure, reduced myocardial contractility and reduced sympathovagal balance across the whole night. Both groups exhibited a reduction in cardiovascular involvement from wake to sleep with similar cardiovascular activity during wake and REM. No group difference was observed in sleep architecture suggesting similar sleeping quality in hypotensives and normotensives. The lower blood pressure and reduced myocardial contractility associated with a lower sympathovagal balance in hypotensives, as compared to normotensives, suggest a night-time hypoactivation of the cardiovascular system supporting the hypothesis of impairment in autonomic control in essential hypotension., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Cardiac autonomic profile during rest and working memory load in essential hypotensive women.
- Author
-
de Zambotti M, Covassin N, Cellini N, Sarlo M, and Stegagno L
- Subjects
- Adult, Anxiety diagnosis, Anxiety etiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Body Mass Index, Depression diagnosis, Depression etiology, Female, Heart Rate physiology, Humans, Hypotension psychology, Neuropsychological Tests, Reaction Time physiology, Statistics as Topic, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Autonomic Nervous System physiopathology, Cardiovascular System physiopathology, Hypotension complications, Memory Disorders etiology, Memory, Short-Term physiology, Rest
- Abstract
To our knowledge, no previous study has provided reliable data supporting a different modulation of the Neurovegetative system in essential hypotension. Our purpose was to provide, in essential hypotensive women compared to normotensives, evidence of a distinct sympathetic and parasympathetic cardiac control. Cardiovascular and autonomic indexes derived by impedance cardiography (heart rate, HR; pre-ejection period, PEP), photoplethysmographic technique (blood pressure, BP) and heart rate variability analysis (high and low frequencies power, HF and LF) were continuously collected during rest and mental stress condition. Hypotensives, compared to normotensives, exhibited prolonged PEP (low sympathetic tone) and elevated HF (high vagal involvement) during rest. In addition, they showed cardiovascular (reduced increases in BP and HR) and sympathetic (lower reductions of PEP) hypo-reactivity to the task. Furthermore, a lower sympathetic reactivity in hypotensives was associated to a poorer task performance. Essential hypotension was characterized by a low sympathetic and high parasympathetic tone. In addition, a reduced sympathetic nervous system reactivity suggests the main role of the Neurovegetative system in mediating the relationship between blood pressure and cognitive performance in hypotensives., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Effects of sleep deprivation on auditory change detection: a N1-mismatch negativity study.
- Author
-
Bortoletto M, Tona Gde M, Scozzari S, Sarasso S, and Stegagno L
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation, Adult, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Electroencephalography, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Female, Humans, Male, Refractory Period, Electrophysiological, Sleep, Sleep Stages physiology, Young Adult, Auditory Perception, Sleep Deprivation physiopathology
- Abstract
The effects of sleep deprivation on neural activity underlying stimulus change detection are still debated. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of sleep deprivation on the relationship between N1 refractoriness and Mismatch Negativity (MMN) as indexes of different stages of change detection. Respectively, N1 represents the sensory feature trace creation with stimulus repetition and MMN represents the memory-based detection of deviance in a new incoming stimulus. Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded from 22 healthy participants during a passive auditory oddball task after a night of normal sleep and after a night of total sleep deprivation (TSD). Importantly, stimulus presentation was organized as a train of 10 stimuli, so that N1 refractoriness could be measured as amplitude decrease with stimulus repetition within each train. Results showed that N1 refractoriness and MMN were not affected by TSD suggesting that the change detection process was preserved in our paradigm. However, the overall N1 amplitude increased after TSD, an effect that may be related to an enhancement of cortical excitability., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Delta EEG band as a marker of left hypofrontality for language in schizophrenia patients.
- Author
-
Spironelli C, Angrilli A, Calogero A, and Stegagno L
- Subjects
- Adult, Biomarkers, Brain Mapping, Female, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Judgment physiology, Male, Memory, Short-Term physiology, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests statistics & numerical data, Phonetics, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales statistics & numerical data, Psychometrics, Reaction Time physiology, Schizophrenia diagnosis, Semantics, Delta Rhythm, Dominance, Cerebral physiology, Electroencephalography, Prefrontal Cortex physiopathology, Schizophrenia physiopathology, Schizophrenic Language, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
- Abstract
Frontal hypoactivation has consistently been demonstrated in schizophrenia patients. We hypothesized that this well-known deficit is asymmetrical, ie, centered over left frontal locations and, in-line with Crow's theory, associated with both loss of linguistic asymmetry and correlated with positive symptoms. Electroencephalography delta band was used as a quantitative index of cortical inhibition in 17 paranoid schizophrenia patients with prevailing positive symptoms and 17 matched control subjects. Delta amplitude was measured by 38 electrodes, while participants performed 3 linguistic tasks, visuoperceptual, rhyming, and semantic judgment. Compared with control subjects, patients did not show overall delta band differences, revealing no detrimental effects of pharmacological treatment. In healthy participants, analysis of 4 quadrants/regions of interest revealed higher delta amplitude in right vs left anterior sites, indicating significant left anterior disinhibition during linguistic processing. Instead, patients showed bilateral delta band distribution and, compared with control subjects, significant greater delta amplitude (ie, brain inhibition) in linguistic left anterior centers. Patients' left hypofrontality was functionally related to their lack of hemispheric specialization for language and was positively correlated with higher levels of delusions (P1) and conceptual disorganization (P2) Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale subscales. Results suggest, in schizophrenia patients, a functional deficit of Broca's area, a region playing a fundamental hierarchical role between and within hemispheres by integrating many basic processes in linguistic and conceptual organization. The significant correlation between lack of anterior asymmetry and increased positive symptoms is in-line with Crow's hypothesis postulating the etiological role of disrupted linguistic frontal asymmetry on the onset of the key symptoms of schizophrenia.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Sleep onset and cardiovascular activity in primary insomnia.
- Author
-
de Zambotti M, Covassin N, De Min Tona G, Sarlo M, and Stegagno L
- Subjects
- Adult, Arousal physiology, Cardiac Output physiology, Cardiography, Impedance, Female, Heart Rate physiology, Humans, Male, Polysomnography, Reference Values, Stroke Volume physiology, Young Adult, Heart innervation, Hemodynamics physiology, Parasympathetic Nervous System physiopathology, Sleep physiology, Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders physiopathology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiopathology, Wakefulness physiology
- Abstract
The transition from wakefulness to sleep is characterized typically by a shift from sympathetic to parasympathetic regulation. Physiological functions, depending on the neurovegetative system, decrease overall. Previous studies have shown cardiovascular and electroencephalographic hyperactivity during wakefulness and sleep in insomniacs compared with normal sleepers, but there is very little evidence of this in the process of sleep onset. The purpose of this study was to compare cardiovascular and autonomic responses before and after falling asleep in eight insomniacs (who met DSM-IV criteria for primary insomnia) and eight normal sleepers. Non-invasive measures of heart rate (HR), stroke volume (SV), cardiac output (CO) and pre-ejection period (PEP) were collected by impedance cardiography during a night of polysomnographic recording. Frequency domain measures [low-frequency (LF), high-frequency (HF)] of heart rate variability (HRV) were also estimated. Decrements in HR and CO and increases in SV and HF normalized units (n.u.) were found in both groups after sleep onset compared with wakefulness. Conversely, PEP (related inversely to sympathetic β-adrenergic activity) showed increases after sleep onset in controls, but remained unchanged in insomniacs. PEP was also significantly lower in insomniacs than in normal sleepers in both conditions. These data suggest that, whereas normal sleepers follow the expected progressive autonomic drop, constant sympathetic hyperactivation is detected in insomniacs. These results support the aetiological hypothesis of physiological hyperarousal underlying primary insomnia., (© 2010 European Sleep Research Society.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Cognitive performance and cardiovascular markers of hyperarousal in primary insomnia.
- Author
-
Covassin N, de Zambotti M, Sarlo M, De Min Tona G, Sarasso S, and Stegagno L
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Photic Stimulation methods, Reaction Time physiology, Sleep Stages physiology, Young Adult, Arousal physiology, Cognition physiology, Heart Rate physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders physiopathology
- Abstract
The purpose of the present study was to assess differences in cardiovascular activity and cognitive performance between insomniacs and good sleepers. Sixteen undergraduates participated in the study, eight insomniacs (age 22.9 ± 2.4) enrolled in accord with DSM-IV criteria for primary insomnia, and eight good sleepers (24.8 ± 2.7) were controls. The task employed, Stop Signal Task, assesses motor inhibition processes and was administered in two sessions, before and after a night of polysomnographic recording. During task performance, cardiovascular measures such as heart rate (HR), stroke volume (SV), cardiac output (CO), pre-ejection period (PEP) and left ventricular ejection time (LVET) were continuously recorded by means of impedance cardiography. Performance results showed prolonged Stop Signal Delay (SSD) in the morning in both groups and slower Stop Signal Reaction Time (SSRT) in insomniacs compared with good sleepers, while no effects were observed for performance accuracy. Analyses performed on cardiovascular parameters revealed higher HR and lower LVET values in the insomnia group as compared to healthy controls in the evening. PEP, an index inversely related to sympathetic beta-adrenergic activity, was continuously reduced in insomniacs, indicating constantly enhanced sympathetic activation. These findings suggest a deficit of motor inhibition control in insomnia, matched with high levels of cardiovascular arousal. Overall, our results support the notion that insomniacs suffer from both cognitive deficits and a hyperarousal disorder affecting somatic activity, that contribute to diurnal complaints often referred in addition to sleep disruption., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Schizophrenia as failure of left hemispheric dominance for the phonological component of language.
- Author
-
Angrilli A, Spironelli C, Elbert T, Crow TJ, Marano G, and Stegagno L
- Subjects
- Brain Mapping, Case-Control Studies, Evoked Potentials, Hallucinations, Humans, Articulation Disorders physiopathology, Dominance, Cerebral, Language, Schizophrenia physiopathology
- Abstract
Background: T. J. Crow suggested that the genetic variance associated with the evolution in Homo sapiens of hemispheric dominance for language carries with it the hazard of the symptoms of schizophrenia. Individuals lacking the typical left hemisphere advantage for language, in particular for phonological components, would be at increased risk of the typical symptoms such as auditory hallucinations and delusions., Methodology/principal Findings: Twelve schizophrenic patients treated with low levels of neuroleptics and twelve matched healthy controls participated in an event-related potential experiment. Subjects matched word-pairs in three tasks: rhyming/phonological, semantic judgment and word recognition. Slow evoked potentials were recorded from 26 scalp electrodes, and a laterality index was computed for anterior and posterior regions during the inter stimulus interval. During phonological processing individuals with schizophrenia failed to achieve the left hemispheric dominance consistently observed in healthy controls. The effect involved anterior (fronto-temporal) brain regions and was specific for the Phonological task; group differences were small or absent when subjects processed the same stimulus material in a Semantic task or during Word Recognition, i.e. during tasks that typically activate more widespread areas in both hemispheres., Conclusions/significance: We show for the first time how the deficit of lateralization in the schizophrenic brain is specific for the phonological component of language. This loss of hemispheric dominance would explain typical symptoms, e.g. when an individual's own thoughts are perceived as an external intruding voice. The change can be interpreted as a consequence of "hemispheric indecision", a failure to segregate phonological engrams in one hemisphere.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Cardiovascular dynamics in blood phobia: evidence for a key role of sympathetic activity in vulnerability to syncope.
- Author
-
Sarlo M, Buodo G, Munafò M, Stegagno L, and Palomba D
- Subjects
- Adult, Arrhythmias, Cardiac physiopathology, Arrhythmias, Cardiac psychology, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Electrocardiography, Emotions physiology, Female, Humans, Photic Stimulation, Social Perception, Young Adult, Blood, Hemodynamics physiology, Phobic Disorders psychology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiopathology, Syncope physiopathology, Syncope psychology
- Abstract
This study was aimed at clarifying the mechanism predisposing people with blood phobia to syncope by investigating the complete hemodynamic response pattern and the underlying autonomic control. Blood phobics and controls were shown 3 film-clips: phobia-related, phobia-unrelated, and neutral. Hemodynamic responses were recorded using impedance cardiography and Finapres. Preejection period and respiratory sinus arrhythmia were employed as indices of cardiac sympathetic and parasympathetic activity. Self-ratings of emotion were also collected. Blood phobics displayed global heart rate and cardiac output increases to the phobic film, mediated by augmented cardiac sympathetic activity. Systolic blood pressure and total peripheral resistance markedly declined, with no evidence of diphasic reaction or parasympathetic activation. An impaired vasomotor response under sympathetic control might be the key mechanism underlying the phobic dysfunctional response.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Cerebral blood flow in essential hypotension during emotional activation.
- Author
-
Stegagno L, Patritti D, Duschek S, Herbert B, and Schandry R
- Subjects
- Blood Pressure physiology, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Cognition physiology, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Functional Laterality physiology, Humans, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Ultrasonography, Doppler, Transcranial, Cerebrovascular Circulation physiology, Emotions physiology, Hypotension physiopathology
- Abstract
Variations of blood flow velocity in the left and right middle cerebral arteries (MCA) were measured in 20 hypotensive women and 20 normotensive control subjects during emotional stimulation using functional transcranial Doppler sonography (fTDS). The emotional stimuli were composed of three series (neutral, pleasant, and unpleasant) of 20 pictures from the International Affective Picture System (IAPS). Both groups exhibited greater increases in right than left MCA blood flow during emotional stimulation. However hypotensive subjects showed smaller increases in blood flow than did normotensive controls. Furthermore hypotensives exhibited lower MCA blood flow velocity in both hemispheres at rest than did normotensives. Nevertheless the hypotensive group rated the emotional pictures as more arousing than did the control group. Results suggest a decreased blood flow, in addition to peripheral, in the central nervous system (CNS) of hypotensives, which was associated with normal emotional responses for both valence and hemispherical asymmetry, but also with a general increase of arousal levels. This dissociation might be related to an increase in anterior cerebral arteries (ACA) blood flow and/or to hypotension-mediated baroreceptors' up-regulation to the reticular system.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Pre-motion positivity during self-paced movements of finger and mouth.
- Author
-
Bortoletto M, Sarlo M, Poli S, and Stegagno L
- Subjects
- Adult, Brain Mapping, Electroencephalography methods, Electromyography methods, Electrooculography methods, Evoked Potentials, Motor physiology, Female, Functional Laterality physiology, Humans, Male, Fingers, Motion, Mouth, Movement physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology
- Abstract
The present study investigated the role of pre-motion positivity in movement initiation and the reason why it is not reliably detectable in every study participant. Nineteen right-handed participants performed self-initiated simple movements of the right index finger and mouth while electroencephalography activity was recorded. Most of the participants showed a clear-cut pre-motion positivity with its characteristics varying as a function of the effector involved in the movement. The pre-motion positivity distribution was ipsilateral for finger movements and symmetrical for mouth movements. The results suggest that pre-motion positivity might represent a go-signal to initiate the movement and its occurrence might depend on movement initiation strategies.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Selectively attending to natural scenes after alcohol consumption: an ERP analysis.
- Author
-
De Cesarei A, Codispoti M, Schupp HT, and Stegagno L
- Subjects
- Adult, Affect drug effects, Cognition drug effects, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, Alcohol Drinking physiopathology, Attention drug effects, Brain drug effects, Brain physiopathology, Central Nervous System Depressants pharmacology, Cues, Environment, Ethanol pharmacology, Evoked Potentials physiology
- Abstract
Alcohol effects on cognitive, emotional and behavioral processes have been linked to an impairment of attention. Because attention operates at the level of specific cognitive subsystems, recent studies demonstrated alcohol effects in specific post-perceptual processes such as response selection and working memory. Measuring event-related potentials, the present study focused on perceptual processes by utilizing a categorization task where participants had to decide whether briefly presented images contained an animal or not. Findings demonstrate an early differential ERP activity for target compared to non-target images, which was reduced after alcohol intoxication. Thus, alcohol intoxication had deleterious effects at the perceptual level of processing considered to reflect the interaction of top-down (category-related) and bottom-up (stimulus-driven) processes. In addition, post-perceptual processes were also impaired by alcohol intoxication.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Effects of sleep reduction on spatial attention.
- Author
-
Versace F, Cavallero C, De Min Tona G, Mozzato M, and Stegagno L
- Subjects
- Adult, Arousal, Circadian Rhythm, Cues, Female, Humans, Male, Polysomnography, Psychomotor Performance, Reference Values, Sleep Stages, Attention, Color Perception, Orientation, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Reaction Time, Sleep Deprivation psychology
- Abstract
To investigate the effects exerted by sleep loss on specific attentive components the performance to a simple reaction time task and to a cued reaction time task were recorded at regular intervals during days following either 8 or 3 h of uninterrupted sleep. Eleven subjects took part in the experiment. The results show that, notwithstanding a general reduction of alertness produced by sleep curtailment (as indicated by the increase of reaction times in the simple reaction time task), in the cued reaction time task only the reaction times to invalidly cued targets significantly increase, while no difference is observed when attention is summoned by a valid cue. This result suggests that the mechanisms underlying orienting of attention are differentially affected by the reduction of alertness level.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Blood pressure changes highlight gender differences in emotional reactivity to arousing pictures.
- Author
-
Sarlo M, Palomba D, Buodo G, Minghetti R, and Stegagno L
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Heart Rate, Humans, Male, Sex Factors, Arousal, Blood Pressure physiology, Emotions, Visual Perception
- Abstract
The current study was aimed at investigating the effects of gender on the magnitude and patterning of blood pressure responses to specific pleasant and unpleasant, arousing visual stimuli. Systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP and DBP), as well as heart rate (HR) and skin conductance (SCR) responses were investigated during picture viewing in 21 female and 25 male students. The pattern of SCR and HR reactivity across emotional categories was found to be similar for men and women. Gender was found to be an effective moderator of BP responses specifically to sexual stimulus content, which prompted greater reactivity in men than in women. These findings extend prior research on gender differences in autonomic responding to emotional visual stimuli and suggest that BP changes might reflect sexual peripheral arousal more than other autonomic measures.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Temporal dynamics of linguistic processes are reorganized in aphasics' cortex: an EEG mapping study.
- Author
-
Angrilli A, Elbert T, Cusumano S, Stegagno L, and Rockstroh B
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Artifacts, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Evoked Potentials physiology, Female, Frontal Lobe physiology, Functional Laterality physiology, Humans, Male, Memory, Short-Term physiology, Middle Aged, Nerve Net physiology, Neuronal Plasticity physiology, Ocular Physiological Phenomena, Phenotype, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Reading, Reproducibility of Results, Aphasia physiopathology, Brain Mapping, Electroencephalography, Linguistics, Temporal Lobe physiopathology
- Abstract
Brain lesions are known to elicit reorganization of function in representational cortex. Using linguistic function as an example, we show that (a) injury-related reorganization may also be observed in language-related cortex and (b) this reorganization not only appears in cortical space but also in the dynamic flow of activity. The present study investigated cortical reorganization in a group of 10 nonfluent aphasics who demonstrated partial recovery of linguistic functions. Compared with controls, linguistic functions were organized in an atypical manner, both in terms of spatial structures involved and in the time course of the linguistic processes, from word reading to late stages of word encoding in working memory. For this purpose, event-related potentials were recorded in a two-stimulus design comprising phonological and semantic tasks. Subjects were asked to judge whether two words, separated by a 2-s interval, rhymed (phonological task) or were semantically associated. During word reading of the phonological task, controls showed negativity/activation over occipital sites, whereas patients displayed negativity at left-medial orbitofrontal locations anterior to the common sites of lesion. During the subsequent 2-s interval associated with word encoding, the two groups showed a reversed pattern: significant left-right anterior asymmetry prevailed in controls, whereas lateralization was absent in patients. Aphasics displayed maximum positivity/inhibition over the left frontal regions, at the typical site of lesion. Compared with controls, patients exhibited significant disinhibition (decreased positivity) of right frontal areas and greater activation of left temporal sites. These results suggest that the concept of language plasticity should include, in addition to spatial aspects of linguistic reorganization, the reorganized temporal dynamics associated with recovery of impaired functions.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Emotional information processing in patients with narcolepsy: a psychophysiologic investigation.
- Author
-
Tucci V, Stegagno L, Vandi S, Ferrillo F, Palomba D, Vignatelli L, Ferini-Strambi L, Montagna P, and Plazzi G
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Arousal physiology, Electroencephalography, Electromyography instrumentation, Electrooculography instrumentation, Female, Heart Rate physiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Psychophysiology instrumentation, Affect, Facial Expression, Narcolepsy complications, Perceptual Disorders complications, Perceptual Disorders diagnosis, Visual Perception physiology
- Abstract
Objectives: Cataplexy is the key symptom of the narcoleptic syndrome. It is usually triggered by emotions, which play an important role in the manifestation and severity of the disease. Accordingly, we compared the psychophysiologic effects on patients with narcolepsy and healthy subjects of processing visual stimuli that have established emotional valences., Method: Eight drug-free patients with narcolepsy with severe cataplexy and 8 controls were studied. Fifty-four color pictures (pleasant, neutral, and unpleasant) selected from the International Affective Picture System were presented on a monitor to the subjects. The effects of exposure to the pictures were assessed in muscular (corrugator, zygomatic and mylohyoid electromyographic activity), autonomic (blood pressure, heart rate, and skin conductance responses) cognitive (scalp-recorded event-related potentials), and subjective (valence, arousal, and dominance by Self-Assessment Manikin) systems., Results: The autonomic, muscular, and cognitive systems showed an attenuated reaction to visual stimuli in patients compared to controls. Furthermore, patients with narcolepsy showed the lowest responses when unpleasant pictures were presented., Conclusions: Our data suggest that, compared to the group of healthy subjects, patients with narcolepsy suffer from a temporal disadvantage in input processing, in particular, of unpleasant stimuli. The drawback exhibited by these patients suggests reduced reactivity of the aversive motivational system responsible for negative or unpleasant emotions.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.