20 results on '"Bolognini N"'
Search Results
2. The Telephone Language Screener (TLS): standardization of a novel telephone-based screening test for language impairment.
- Author
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Aiello EN, Pucci V, Diana L, Corvaglia A, Niang A, Mattiello S, Preti AN, Durante G, Ravelli A, Consonni L, Guerra C, Ponti AD, Sangalli G, Difonzo T, Scarano S, Perucca L, Zago S, Appollonio I, Mondini S, and Bolognini N
- Subjects
- Humans, Sensitivity and Specificity, Reproducibility of Results, Telephone, Reference Standards, Neuropsychological Tests, Cognition Disorders diagnosis, Language Development Disorders
- Abstract
Background: This study aimed at developing and standardizing the Telephone Language Screener (TLS), a novel, disease-nonspecific, telephone-based screening test for language disorders., Methods: The TLS was developed in strict pursuance to the current psycholinguistic standards. It comprises nine tasks assessing phonological, lexical-semantic and morpho-syntactic components, as well as an extra Backward Digit Span task. The TLS was administered to 480 healthy participants (HPs), along with the Telephone-based Semantic Verbal Fluency (t-SVF) test and a Telephone-based Composite Language Index (TBCLI), as well as to 37 cerebrovascular/neurodegenerative patients-who also underwent the language subscale of the Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status (TICS-L). An HP subsample was also administered an in-person language battery. Construct validity, factorial structure, internal consistency, test-retest and inter-rater reliability were tested. Norms were derived via Equivalent Scores. The capability of the TLS to discriminate patients from HPs and to identify, among the patient cohort, those with a defective TICS-L, was also examined., Results: The TLS was underpinned by a mono-component structure and converged with the t-SVF (p < .001), the TBCLI (p < .001) and the in-person language battery (p = .002). It was internally consistent (McDonald's ω = 0.67) and reliable between raters (ICC = 0.99) and at retest (ICC = 0.83). Age and education, but not sex, were predictors of TLS scores. The TLS optimally discriminated patients from HPs (AUC = 0.80) and successfully identified patients with an impaired TICS-L (AUC = 0.92). In patients, the TLS converged with TICS-L scores (p = 0.016)., Discussion: The TLS is a valid, reliable, normed and clinically feasible telephone-based screener for language impairment., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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3. Can you please find my upper limb? Somatoparaphrenia without personal neglect: a new case report.
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Mancuso M, Basagni B, Bolognini N, Vallar G, and Damora A
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- 2023
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4. Quantification of retinal ganglion cell loss in patients with homonymous visual field defect due to stroke.
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Bianchi Marzoli S, Melzi L, Ciasca P, Raggi A, Bersano A, Casati C, and Bolognini N
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- Adult, Humans, Middle Aged, Visual Fields, Nerve Fibers pathology, Retina, Vision Disorders, Tomography, Optical Coherence methods, Retinal Ganglion Cells pathology, Stroke complications, Stroke diagnostic imaging, Stroke pathology
- Abstract
Background: To quantify the degree of ganglion cell degeneration through spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) in adult patients with post-stroke homonymous visual field defect., Methods: Fifty patients with acquired visual field defect due to stroke (mean age = 61 years) and thirty healthy controls (mean age = 58 years) were included. Mean deviation (MD) and pattern standard deviation (PSD), average peripapillary retinal nerve fibre layer thickness (pRNLF-AVG), average ganglion cell complex thickness (GCC-AVG), global loss volume (GLV) and focal loss volume (FLV) were measured. Patients were divided according to the damaged vascular territories (occipital vs. parieto-occipital) and stroke type (ischaemic vs. haemorrhagic). Group analysis was conducted with ANOVA and multiple regressions., Results: pRNFL-AVG was significantly decreased among patients with lesions in parieto-occipital territories compared to controls and to patients with lesions in occipital territories (p = .04), with no differences with respect to stroke type. GCC-AVG, GLV and FLV differed in stroke patients and controls, regardless of stroke type and involved vascular territories. Age and elapsed time from stroke had a significant effect on pRNFL-AVG and GCC-AVG (p < .01), but not on MD and PSD., Conclusions: Reduction of SD-OCT parameters occurs following both ischaemic and haemorrhagic occipital stroke, but it is larger when the injury extends to parietal territories and increases as time since stroke increases. The size of visual field defect is unrelated to SD-OCT measurements. Macular GCC thinning appeared to be more sensitive than pRNFL in detecting retrograde retinal ganglion cell degeneration and its retinotopic pattern in stroke., (© 2023. Fondazione Società Italiana di Neurologia.)
- Published
- 2023
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5. The effects of estradiol levels on crossmodal perception: a study on the sound induced flash illusion in healthy and menstrually related migraine individuals.
- Author
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Maccora S, Bolognini N, Mannina C, Torrente A, Agnello L, Lo Sasso B, Ciaccio M, Sireci G, and Brighina F
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- Humans, Female, Prospective Studies, Auditory Perception physiology, Acoustic Stimulation, Visual Perception physiology, Photic Stimulation, Illusions, Migraine Disorders
- Abstract
Objective: The sound-induced flash illusion (SIFI) is a valid paradigm to study multisensorial perception. In the "fission" SIFI, multiple flashes are perceived when observing a single flash paired with two or more beeps. SIFI is largely dependent on visual and acoustic cortex excitability; in migraine, dysfunctional cortical excitability affects SIFI perception. Since estrogen peak occurring during ovulation can increase neuronal excitability, the present study aims to verify whether cortical excitability shifts linked to the menstrual cycle could influence SIFI., Methods: In a comparative prospective study, we tested the effect of estrogens on crossmodal perception using the SIFI. We recruited 27 females in reproductive age, including 16 healthy and 11 menstrually related migraine females, testing their proneness to SIFI on day 14 (high estradiol) and day 27 (low estradiol) of menstrual cycle., Results: Women on day 14 reported less flashes than on day 27 (p = 0.02) in the fission illusion, suggesting a pro-excitatory effect of estradiol on visual cortex excitability during ovulation. Moreover, we confirmed that migraine women perceived less flashes (p = 0.001) than controls, independently from cycle phase. Non-migraineurs women significantly reported more flashes on day 27 than on day 14 (p = 0.04)., Conclusions: This study suggests that estradiol may influence the multisensory perception due to changes of visual cortex excitability, with high estradiol peak leading to increased visual cortical sensitivity during ovulation in non-migraineurs. Visual cortex hyperresponsiveness, here reflected by reduced SIFI, is not influenced by estradiol fluctuations in migraine women, as shown by reduced fission effects on day 14 and 27., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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6. Correction to: The Frontal Assessment Battery (FAB) and its sub‑scales: validation and updated normative data in an Italian population sample.
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Aiello EN, Esposito A, Gramegna C, Gazzaniga V, Zago S, Difonzo T, Appollonio IM, and Bolognini N
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- 2023
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7. Correction to: ALS Cognitive Behavioral Screen‑Phone Version (ALS‑CBS™‑PhV): norms, psychometrics, and diagnostics in an Italian population sample.
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Aiello EN, Esposito A, Giannone I, Diana L, Woolley S, Murphy J, Christodoulou G, Tremolizzo L, Bolognini N, and Appollonio I
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- 2023
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8. Correction to: Psychometrics and diagnostics of Italian cognitive screening tests: a systematic review.
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Aiello EN, Rimoldi S, Bolognini N, Appollonio I, and Arcara G
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- 2023
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9. Correction to: The Testamentary Capacity Assessment Tool (TCAT): validation and normative data.
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Bolognini N, Gramegna C, Esposito A, Aiello EN, Difonzo T, and Zago S
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- 2023
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10. Psychometrics, diagnostics and usability of Italian tools assessing behavioural and functional outcomes in neurological, geriatric and psychiatric disorders: a systematic review.
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Aiello EN, D'Iorio A, Montemurro S, Maggi G, Giacobbe C, Bari V, Di Tella GS, Pischedda F, Bolognini N, Appollonio I, Arcara G, and Santangelo G
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- Humans, Aged, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Italy, Quality of Life, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Mental Disorders therapy
- Abstract
Background: Psychometric instruments assessing behavioural and functional outcomes (BFIs) in neurological, geriatric and psychiatric populations are relevant towards diagnostics, prognosis and intervention. However, BFIs often happen not to meet methodological-statistical standards, thus lowering their level of recommendation in clinical practice and research. This work thus aimed at (1) providing an up-to-date compendium on psychometrics, diagnostics and usability of available Italian BFIs and (2) delivering evidence-based information on their level of recommendation., Methods: This review was pre-registered (PROSPERO ID: CRD42021295430) and performed according to PRISMA guidelines. Several psychometric, diagnostic and usability measures were addressed as outcomes. Quality assessment was performed via an ad hoc checklist, the Behavioural and Functional Instrument Quality Assessment., Results: Out of an initial N = 830 reports, 108 studies were included (N = 102 BFIs). Target constructs included behavioural/psychiatric symptoms, quality of life and physical functioning. BFIs were either self- or caregiver-/clinician-report. Studies in clinical conditions (including neurological, psychiatric and geriatric ones) were the most represented. Validity was investigated for 85 and reliability for 80 BFIs, respectively. Criterion and factorial validity testing were infrequent, whereas content and ecological validity and parallel forms were almost never addressed. Item response theory analyses were seldom carried out. Diagnostics and norms lacked for about one-third of BFIs. Information on administration time, ease of use and ceiling/floor effects were often unreported., Discussion: Several available BFIs for the Italian population do not meet adequate statistical-methodological standards, this prompting a greater care from researchers involved in their development., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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11. Correction to: The Frontal Assessment Battery (FAB) and its sub‑scales: validation and updated normative data in an Italian population sample.
- Author
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Aiello EN, Esposito A, Gramegna C, Gazzaniga V, Zago S, Difonzo T, Appollonio IM, and Bolognini N
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- 2022
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12. Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status (TICS): Italian adaptation, psychometrics and diagnostics.
- Author
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Aiello EN, Esposito A, Giannone I, Diana L, Appollonio I, and Bolognini N
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- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Italy, Male, Middle Aged, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Surveys and Questionnaires, Cognition, Telephone
- Abstract
Background: Telephone-based cognitive screening (TBCS) is crucial to telehealth care of neurological patients, prevention campaigns, and epidemiological studies on cognitive impairment. The Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status (TICS) is one of the most widespread and psychometrically/diagnostically sound TBCS test, with several versions developed worldwide (e.g., with and without a delayed recall item). In Italy, only attempts of adaptation and preliminary evidence of its statistical features have been provided so far. This study thus aimed at (1) developing an Italian version of the TICS and assessing its (2) psychometric and (3) diagnostic properties., Methods: A back-translated and culturally adapted version of the TICS was developed. Three-hundred and sixty-five healthy individuals from different regions of Italy (147 males, 216 females; age: 53.2 ± 16 years; education: 13 ± 4.5 years) were administered the TICS and the Italian telephone-based Mini-Mental State Examination (Itel-MMSE). Validity was tested by convergence and at the structure level, whereas reliability as internal consistency, test-retest, and inter-rater. Diagnostic accuracy, item difficulty, and discrimination were also examined., Results: The TICS featured a single component and its score converged with that of the Itel-MMSE (r
s = .37). Reliability was excellent as inter-rater (ICC = .94), good as test-retest (ICC = .78), and acceptable as internal consistency (Cronbach's α = .63). Accuracy was high as tested against the Itel-MMSE (AUC = .83) and did not improve when adding the delayed recall. Backward subtraction was the most difficult and discriminative task., Discussion: The Italian TICS is a valid, reliable, and diagnostically accurate TBCS test. The original format of the TICS can be thus adopted in both clinical and research settings., (© 2021. Fondazione Società Italiana di Neurologia.)- Published
- 2022
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13. ALS Cognitive Behavioral Screen-Phone Version (ALS-CBS™-PhV): norms, psychometrics, and diagnostics in an Italian population sample.
- Author
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Aiello EN, Esposito A, Giannone I, Diana L, Woolley S, Murphy J, Christodoulou G, Tremolizzo L, Bolognini N, and Appollonio I
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- Adult, Aged, Cognition, Delivery of Health Care, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Telephone, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Up to 50% of motor neuron disease (MND) patients show neuropsychological deficits which negatively affect prognosis and care. However, disability-related logistical issues and uneven geographical coverage of healthcare services may prevent MND patients from accessing neuropsychological evaluations. This study thus aimed to standardize for the Italian population the ALS Cognitive Behavioral Screen-Phone Version (ALS-CBS™-PhV), an MND-specific, telephone-based screening for frontotemporal dysfunction., Methods: The cognitive section of the ALS-CBS™-PhV, the Italian telephone-based Mini-Mental State Examination (Itel-MMSE), and the Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status (TICS) was administered to 359 healthy individuals (143 males, 216 females; age, 52.7 ± 15.8; education, 13.1 ± 4.4). Norms were derived through equivalent scores. Validity, factorial structure, reliability, diagnostic accuracy, and item difficulty and discrimination were examined. Statistical equivalence between the telephone-based and in-person versions was tested., Results: ALS-CBS™-PhV measures were predicted by age and education. The ALS-CBS™-PhV reflected a mono-component structure, converged with Itel-MMSE and TICS scores (r
s = .23-.51) and was equivalent to its in-person format (t = .37; p = .72). Good internal (Cronbach's α = .61), test-retest (ICC = .69), and inter-rater (ICC = .96) reliability was detected. High accuracy was found when tested against both the Itel-MMSE and the TICS (AUC = .82-89). Backward digit span items were the most discriminative., Discussion: The ALS-CBS™-PhV is a statistically solid screening test for frontotemporal disorders featuring MND. Its standardization allows for (1) improvements in tele-healthcare for MND patients, (2) epidemiological applications, and (3) effective assessments in decentralized clinical trials. The ALS-CBS™-PhV can be also suitable for assessing bedridden and visually impaired patients with motor disorders., (© 2021. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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14. The Testamentary Capacity Assessment Tool (TCAT): validation and normative data.
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Bolognini N, Gramegna C, Esposito A, Aiello EN, Difonzo T, and Zago S
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- Adult, Cognition, Educational Status, Female, Humans, Male, Mental Status and Dementia Tests, Neuropsychological Tests, Cognition Disorders diagnosis, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: There is an increasing need for objective and standardized assessment of testamentary capacity (TC) in dementia. A new instrument, the Testamentary Capacity Assessment Tool (TCAT), has been recently developed; however, the lack of validation and normative data regarding this cognitive screening test has limited its adoption in forensic and clinical settings. The present study collects normative data for the TCAT and assesses its convergent validity with standardized cognitive tests and the capacity to define what a 'testament' is., Methods: The study involved 323 neurologically healthy adults (123 males, 200 females) of different ages (31-93 years) and different educational levels (4-25 years). The TCAT was administered along with the Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II), the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), the Frontal Assessment Battery (FAB) and the Testament Definition Scale (TDS)., Results: Multiple regression analyses revealed a significant effect for gender, age and education on TCAT scores. Correlation analyses showed significant associations between the TCAT and the MMSE, MoCA, FAB and BDI-II. A positive correlation between the TCAT and TDS was also found, proving good convergent validity of the TCAT with respect to TC. Finally, cut-off scores and Equivalent Scores (ES) were computed., Discussion: The present study provides normative data for using the TCAT as an adjuvant cognitive screening test in the neuropsychological evaluation of TC. Our findings shall be of interest for the adoption of the TCAT also in clinical practice, since it evaluates cognitive functions (e.g., autobiographic memory, Theory of Mind) not measured by traditional screening tests., (© 2021. Fondazione Società Italiana di Neurologia.)
- Published
- 2022
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15. Psychometrics and diagnostics of Italian cognitive screening tests: a systematic review.
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Aiello EN, Rimoldi S, Bolognini N, Appollonio I, and Arcara G
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- Adult, Cognition, Humans, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Checklist, Research
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Background: Cognitive screening tests (CSTs) are crucial to neuropsychological diagnostics, and thus need to be featured by robust psychometric and diagnostic properties. However, CSTs happen not to meet desirable statistical standards, negatively affecting their level of recommendations and applicability. This study aimed at (a) providing an up-to-date compendium of available CSTs in Italy, (b) report their psychometric and diagnostic properties, and (c) address related limitations., Methods: This review was implemented by consulting Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses and pre-registered on the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews. Standardization and usability studies focusing on norms, validity, reliability, or sensitivity/specificity (and derived metrics) in adults were considered for eligibility. Quality assessment was performed by means of an ad hoc checklist collecting information on sampling, psychometrics/diagnostics, norming, and feasibility., Results: Sixty studies were included out of an initial N = 683. Identified CSTs (N = 40) were classified into general, domain-, and disease-specific (N = 17, 7, and 16, respectively), the latter being less statistically robust than remaining categories. Validity and reliability evidence was provided for 29 and 26 CSTs, respectively, sensitivity/specificity for 20 and norms for 33. Prevalence- and post-test-based diagnostic metrics were seldomly represented; factorial structures, ceiling/floor effects, and acceptability rarely investigated; content, face, and ecological validity never assessed., Discussion: Although available Italian CSTs overall met basic psychometric/diagnostic requirements, their statistical profile often proved to be poor on several properties that are desirable for clinical applications, with a few exceptions among general and domain-specific ones., (© 2021. Fondazione Società Italiana di Neurologia.)
- Published
- 2022
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16. The Frontal Assessment Battery (FAB) and its sub-scales: validation and updated normative data in an Italian population sample.
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Aiello EN, Esposito A, Gramegna C, Gazzaniga V, Zago S, Difonzo T, Appollonio IM, and Bolognini N
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- Aged, Educational Status, Female, Humans, Male, Mental Status and Dementia Tests, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Reference Values, Executive Function
- Abstract
Background: Deficits of executive functioning (EF) are frequently found in neurological disorders. The Frontal Assessment Battery (FAB) is one of the most widespread and psychometrically robust EF screeners in clinical settings. However, in Italy, FAB norms date back to 15 years ago; moreover, its validity against "EF-loaded" global cognitive screeners (e.g., the Montreal Cognitive Assessment, MoCA) has yet to be tested. This study thus aimed at (a) providing updated normative data for the Italian FAB and (b) assessing its convergent validity with the MoCA., Methods: Four-hundred and seventy-five healthy Italian native speakers (306 females, 169 males; mean age: 61.08 ± 15.1; mean education: 11.67 ± 4.57) were administered by the MoCA and the FAB. FAB items were divided into three subscales: FAB-1 (linguistically mediated EF), FAB-2 (planning), and FAB-3 (inhibition). Regression-based norms were derived (equivalent scores) for all FAB measures., Results: Age and education were predictive of all FAB measures, whereas no gender differences were detected. The FAB and its sub-scales were related to MoCA measures-the strongest associations being found with MoCA total and MoCA-EF scores. FAB sub-scales were both internally related and associated with FAB total scores., Discussion: The FAB proved to have convergent validity with both global cognitive and EF measures in healthy individuals. The present study provides updated normative data for the FAB and its sub-scales in an Italian population sample, and thus supports an adaptive usage of this EF screener., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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17. Rivermead assessment of somatosensory performance: Italian normative data.
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Russo C, Spandri V, Gallucci M, Halligan P, Bolognini N, and Vallar G
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- Humans, Italy, Proprioception, Touch, Brain Injuries, Stroke complications, Stroke diagnosis
- Abstract
The Rivermead assessment of somatosensory performance (RASP) provides a quantitative assessment of somatosensory processing, suitable for brain-damaged patients suffering from stroke. It consists of seven subcomponents: Subtest 1 (sharp/dull discrimination), Subtest 2 (surface pressure touch), Subtest 3 (surface localization), Subtest 4 (sensory extinction), Subtest 5 (2-point discrimination), Subtest 6 (temperature discrimination), and Subtest 7 (proprioception). Overall, the RASP assesses 5 bilateral body regions: face (cheek), hand (palm and back), and foot (sole and back). This study aimed at providing normative data and cut-off scores for RASP subtests, for each body region, in a large Italian population sample. We present results from 300 healthy Italian individuals aged 19 to 98 years. Data represent a comprehensive set of norms that cover each subtest and each body region tested. Performance in Subtests 1, 5, and 6 decreased, for some body regions, with increasing age. Based on these results, norms were stratified for age (seven groups), with the pathological/non-pathological cut-off coinciding with the 5th percentile. Conversely, other results were not influenced by age; in such cases, a single error, in each body region, has to be considered indicative of pathological performance. This independent investigation of all subcomponents of the somatosensory system, for each body region, further confirms RASP's potential in clinical practice, for neurological assessment, as well as in research settings., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
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18. Pearl and pitfalls in brain functional analysis by event-related potentials: a narrative review by the Italian Psychophysiology and Cognitive Neuroscience Society on methodological limits and clinical reliability-part II.
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de Tommaso M, Betti V, Bocci T, Bolognini N, Di Russo F, Fattapposta F, Ferri R, Invitto S, Koch G, Miniussi C, Piccione F, Ragazzoni A, Sartucci F, Rossi S, and Valeriani M
- Subjects
- Brain, Electroencephalography, Evoked Potentials, Humans, Italy, Magnetoencephalography, Psychophysiology, Reproducibility of Results, Cognitive Neuroscience
- Abstract
This review focuses on new and/or less standardized event-related potentials methods, in order to improve their knowledge for future clinical applications. The olfactory event-related potentials (OERPs) assess the olfactory functions in time domain, with potential utility in anosmia and degenerative diseases. The transcranial magnetic stimulation-electroencephalography (TMS-EEG) could support the investigation of the intracerebral connections with very high temporal discrimination. Its application in the diagnosis of disorders of consciousness has achieved recent confirmation. Magnetoencephalography (MEG) and event-related fields (ERF) could improve spatial accuracy of scalp signals, with potential large application in pre-surgical study of epileptic patients. Although these techniques have methodological limits, such as high inter- and intraindividual variability and high costs, their diffusion among researchers and clinicians is hopeful, pending their standardization.
- Published
- 2020
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19. Pearls and pitfalls in brain functional analysis by event-related potentials: a narrative review by the Italian Psychophysiology and Cognitive Neuroscience Society on methodological limits and clinical reliability-part I.
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de Tommaso M, Betti V, Bocci T, Bolognini N, Di Russo F, Fattapposta F, Ferri R, Invitto S, Koch G, Miniussi C, Piccione F, Ragazzoni A, Sartucci F, Rossi S, Arcara G, Berchicci M, Bianco V, Delussi M, Gentile E, Giovannelli F, Mannarelli D, Marino M, Mussini E, Pauletti C, Pellicciari MC, Pisoni A, Raggi A, and Valeriani M
- Subjects
- Brain, Evoked Potentials, Female, Humans, Italy, Male, Psychophysiology, Reproducibility of Results, Cognitive Neuroscience, Electroencephalography
- Abstract
Event-related potentials (ERPs) are obtained from the electroencephalogram (EEG) or the magnetoencephalogram (MEG, event-related fields (ERF)), extracting the activity that is time-locked to an event. Despite the potential utility of ERP/ERF in cognitive domain, the clinical standardization of their use is presently undefined for most of procedures. The aim of the present review is to establish limits and reliability of ERP medical application, summarize main methodological issues, and present evidence of clinical application and future improvement. The present section of the review focuses on well-standardized ERP methods, including P300, Contingent Negative Variation (CNV), Mismatch Negativity (MMN), and N400, with a chapter dedicated to laser-evoked potentials (LEPs). One section is dedicated to proactive preparatory brain activity as the Bereitschaftspotential and the prefrontal negativity (BP and pN). The P300 and the MMN potentials have a limited but recognized role in the diagnosis of cognitive impairment and consciousness disorders. LEPs have a well-documented usefulness in the diagnosis of neuropathic pain, with low application in clinical assessment of psychophysiological basis of pain. The other ERP components mentioned here, though largely applied in normal and pathological cases and well standardized, are still confined to the research field. CNV, BP, and pN deserve to be largely tested in movement disorders, just to explain possible functional changes in motor preparation circuits subtending different clinical pictures and responses to treatments.
- Published
- 2020
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20. NIHSS as predictor of clinical outcome at 6 months in patients with intracerebral hemorrhage.
- Author
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Mantero V, Scaccabarozzi C, Aliprandi A, Sangalli D, Rifino N, Filizzolo M, Russo C, Bolognini N, and Salmaggi A
- Subjects
- Humans, National Institutes of Health (U.S.), United States, Cerebral Hemorrhage, Stroke
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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