4 results on '"Vincenzo Provitera"'
Search Results
2. Sensory deficit in Parkinson's disease: evidence of a cutaneous denervation
- Author
-
Vincenzo Provitera, Anna Estraneo, Giuseppe Caporaso, Maria Nolano, Lucio Santoro, Mona M. Selim, Bernardo Lanzillo, Annamaria Stancanelli, and A.M. Saltalamacchia
- Subjects
Male ,Pain Threshold ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Parkinson's disease ,Sensory processing ,Biopsy ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Neural Conduction ,Sensory system ,Nerve Fibers, Myelinated ,Central nervous system disease ,Nerve Fibers ,Sensory threshold ,Threshold of pain ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Pain Measurement ,Skin ,Denervation ,Microscopy, Confocal ,business.industry ,Microcirculation ,Peripheral Nervous System Diseases ,Parkinson Disease ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Sensory Thresholds ,Peripheral nervous system ,Sensation Disorders ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Mechanoreceptors - Abstract
Sensory disturbances are part of the clinical picture of Parkinson's disease. Abnormalities in sensory processing, through a basal ganglia involvement, are thought to be responsible for the sensory dysfunction since sensory nerve conduction velocity (NCV) is usually normal. However, NCV does not examine small fibres or terminal endings of large sensory fibres, whereas skin biopsy is more suitable for these purposes. To evaluate peripheral sensory nerves in Parkinson's disease, we studied cutaneous free and encapsulated sensory nerve endings in 18 patients and 30 healthy controls using 3-mm punch biopsies from glabrous and hairy skin. Ten patients had additional skin biopsies from the contralateral side. Further evaluation included NCV and Quantitative Sensory Testing. Parkinson's disease patients showed a significant increase in tactile and thermal thresholds (P < 0.01), a significant reduction in mechanical pain perception (P < 0.01) and significant loss of epidermal nerve fibres (ENFs) and Meissner corpuscles (MCs) (P < 0.01). In patients with bilateral biopsies, loss of pain perception and ENFs was higher on the more affected side (P < 0.01). We found evidence suggesting attempts at counteracting degenerative processes as increased branching, sprouting of nerves and enlargement of the vascular bed. Morphological and functional findings did not correlate with age or disease duration. Disease severity correlated with loss of MCs and reduction in cold perception and pain perception. We demonstrated a peripheral deafferentation in Parkinson's disease that could play a major role in the pathogenesis of the sensory dysfunction.
- Published
- 2008
3. Ross syndrome: a rare or a misknown disorder of thermoregulation? A skin innervation study on 12 subjects
- Author
-
Annamaria Stancanelli, Maria Nolano, Bernardo Lanzillo, Vincenzo Donadio, Vincenzo Provitera, Anna Perretti, A.M. Saltalamacchia, Lucio Santoro, and Fiore Manganelli
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adie syndrome ,Biopsy ,Sweating ,Tonic Pupil ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Peripheral Nervous System ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Medical history ,Skin ,Hypohidrosis ,Microscopy, Confocal ,Tonic pupil ,Reflex, Abnormal ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Syndrome ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Dermatology ,Sudomotor ,Autonomic nervous system ,Adie Syndrome ,Sensation Disorders ,Skin biopsy ,Ross' syndrome ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cutaneous innervation ,business ,Body Temperature Regulation - Abstract
Ross syndrome is described as a rare disorder of sweating associated with areflexia and tonic pupil. Since Ross's first description in 1958, approximately 40 cases have been described. We assessed the involvement of cutaneous innervation in 12 subjects with Ross syndrome using quantitative sensory testing, sweating assessment and immunohistochemical study of anhidrotic and hyperhidrotic skin. This evaluation was repeated over time in 4 out of 12 subjects. In addition, we enrolled four subjects with Holmes-Adie syndrome (areflexia and tonic pupil) to investigate similarities between the two conditions. We found in Ross patients a complex and progressive involvement of cutaneous sensory and autonomic innervation underlying the impairment of heat production and heat dissipation through both loss of sweating and loss of cutaneous blood flow regulation. In Holmes-Adie subjects we found a mild impairment of sweating without thermoregulatory problems. The persistence of a sudomotor vasoactive intestinal peptide-immunoreactive (VIP-ir) innervation, although deranged and poor, definitely differentiated Holmes-Adie from Ross patients. Ross syndrome is a progressive and complex disorder of thermoregulation difficult to differentiate from the probably pathogenetically related Holmes-Adie syndrome. Sweating assessment and skin biopsy are suitable tools to define a boundary between them. Owing to the large number of Ross patients observed in only 5 years, and to the long and complex medical history of most of them, doubts arise on the effective rarity of this condition, and we warn family doctors and other specialists, besides neurologists, to become aware of this complex disorder.
- Published
- 2006
4. Internodal length variability of dermal myelinated fibres
- Author
-
Vincenzo Provitera, Maria Nolano, and Lucio Santoro
- Subjects
Homogeneous ,Neurology (clinical) ,Anatomy ,Biology ,Neuroscience ,Ranvier's node - Abstract
Sir, We would like to make a few considerations on the recent paper published in Brain by Saporta et al. (2009), since our research focus in the recent years has been on quantification and morphometry of cutaneous myelinated endings. Measuring the very last endings of dermal myelinated fibres in the fingertip of normal subjects (Nolano et al. , 2003), we observed a mean internodal length of 79.1 ± 13.8 µm. Compared with the values reported by Saporta et al. (2009) in controls, this measure is shorter and has a lower standard deviation, which suggests a more homogeneous series of internodes. More recently, including measurements from all myelinated fibres, regardless of …
- Published
- 2010
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.