26 results on '"Di Nardo, Francesco"'
Search Results
2. eCTG: an automatic procedure to extract digital cardiotocographic signals from digital images
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Sbrollini, Agnese, Agostinelli, Angela, Marcantoni, Ilaria, Morettini, Micaela, Burattini, Luca, Di Nardo, Francesco, Fioretti, Sandro, and Burattini, Laura
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- 2018
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3. Simplified Muscle-Recruitment Strategy During Walking in Parkinson's Disease People: A Time-Frequency Analysis of EMG Signal.
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Di Nardo, Francesco, Romanato, Marco, Spolaor, Fabiola, Volpe, Daniele, Fioretti, Sandro, and Sawacha, Zimi
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PARKINSON'S disease ,TIME-frequency analysis ,MUSCLES ,BICEPS femoris ,RECTUS femoris muscles ,TIBIALIS anterior ,WAVELET transforms - Abstract
Although gait analysis has been widely adopted to describe Parkinson's disease (PD) dysfunctions during walking, few efforts have been made to understand muscle activity role. The current study aims to characterize lower-limb-muscle recruitment during walking in time-frequency domain, based on Continuous Wavelet Transform (CWT) analysis of surface-electromyography (sEMG) signal from lower-limb muscles. sEMG signals from Tibialis Anterior (TA), Gastrocnemius Lateralis (GL), Rectus Femoris (RF), and Biceps Femoris (BF) of 20 people with PD and 10 age-matched healthy controls (HC) were acquired during gait. sEMG signals were processed applying a CWT-based approach to assess the occurrence frequency (OF, i.e., the percentage of strides of each muscle activation occurrence) and the frequency content of each muscle activation (in Hz). These parameters are rarely quantified in PD. Compared to HC, people with PD displayed a significant decrease (p<0.05) in median OF on RF, BF, and TA, indicating a tendency to reduce the global involvement of lower-limb muscles. No significant differences (p>0.05) in OF were detected among muscle within the same population. No significant changes (p>0.05) in frequency content were revealed in PD. This analysis suggests that people with PD are characterized by a reduced recruitment of those muscles typically adopted to finely control body-segment motion and a concomitant increased recruitment of those muscles mainly involved in locomotion. No substantial alteration in recruiting muscle fibers is associated with PD. These findings suggest that people with PD are inclined to adopt simpler muscular-recruitment strategies during walking, compared to HC. • Lower-limb-muscle recruitment is assessed during parkinsonian (PD) walking. • Surface-EMG signal is processed in time-frequency domain by Wavelet Transform. • Muscle involvement in walking is reduced in PD patients compared to healthy peers. • No substantial alteration is observed in muscle-fiber recruitment associated to PD. • People affected by PD adopt a simpler muscular-recruitment strategy during walking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. Surface EMG patterns for quantification of thigh muscle co-contraction in school-age children: Normative data during walking.
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Di Nardo, Francesco, Strazza, Annachiara, Mengarelli, Alessandro, Ercolani, Serena, Morgoni, Nicole, Burattini, Laura, Agostini, Valentina, Knaflitz, Marco, and Fioretti, Sandro
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GAIT in humans , *ELECTROMYOGRAPHY , *MUSCLE contraction , *HEALTH of school children , *MUSCLE strength , *KNEE abnormalities , *WALKING , *THIGH , *QUADRICEPS muscle physiology , *POSTURAL balance , *WEIGHT-bearing (Orthopedics) , *PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Muscle co-contractions are particularly relevant in analyzing children pathologies. To interpret surface electromyography (sEMG) in pathological conditions, reliable normative data in non-pathological children are required for direct comparison. Aim of the study was the quantification of co-contraction activity between quadriceps femoris (QF) and hamstring muscles during walking in healthy children. To this aim, Statistical gait analysis was performed on sEMG signals from rectus femoris (RF), vastus medialis (VM), and lateral hamstrings (LH), in 16401 strides walked by 100 healthy school-age children. Co-contractions were assessed as overlapping period between activation intervals of considered muscles. Results showed full superimpositions of LH with both RF and VL activity from terminal swing, 80-100% of gait cycle, to successive loading response (0-15% of gait cycle), in around 90% of strides, as reported in adults. This indicates that children regularly use a cocontraction activity between QF and hamstring muscles in weight acceptance during walking, supporting the hypothesis of a regulatory role of co-contraction in providing knee joint stability. Concomitant activity of QF and hamstring muscles was detected also during push-off phase (30-50% of gait cycle), showing a large variability intra and inter subjects and a lower occurrence frequency (around 25% of strides). This could be intended for controlling rapid knee flexion and/or stabilizing pelvis during body progression. Present findings represent the first attempt to provide normative sEMG dataset on variability of QF and hamstring muscles co-contractions during child walking, useful for discriminating physiological and pathological behavior and for designing future studies on maturation of gait. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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5. A new parameter for quantifying the variability of surface electromyographic signals during gait: The occurrence frequency.
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Di Nardo, Francesco, Mengarelli, Alessandro, Strazza, Annachiara, Agostini, Valentina, Knaflitz, Marco, Burattini, Laura, and Fioretti, Sandro
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ELECTROMYOGRAPHY , *GAIT in humans , *PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of walking , *TIBIALIS anterior , *RECTUS femoris muscles , *BICEPS femoris , *QUADRICEPS muscle physiology , *SKELETAL muscle physiology , *SIGNAL processing , *WALKING , *HUMAN research subjects , *RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Natural variability of myoelectric activity during walking was recently analyzed considering hundreds of strides. This allowed assessing a parameter seldom considered in classic surface EMG (sEMG) studies: the occurrence frequency, defined as the frequency each muscle activation occurs with, quantified by the number of strides when a muscle is recruited with that specific activation modality. Aim of present study was to propose the occurrence frequency as a new parameter for assessing sEMG-signal variability during walking. Aim was addressed by processing sEMG signals acquired from Gastrocnemius Lateralis, Tibialis Anterior, Rectus Femoris and Biceps femoris in 40 healthy subjects in order to: (1) show that occurrence frequency is not correlated with ON/OFF instants (Rmean=0.11±0.07; P>0.05) and total time of activation (Rmean=0.15±0.08; P>0.05); (2) confirm the above results by two handy examples of application (analysis of gender and age) which highlighted that significant (P<0.05) gender-related and age-related differences within population were detected in occurrence frequency, but not in temporal sEMG parameters. In conclusion, present study demonstrated that occurrence frequency is able to provide further information, besides those supplied by classical temporal sEMG parameters and thus it is suitable to complement them in the evaluation of variability of myoelectric activity during walking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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6. Surgery-first orthognathic approach vs traditional orthognathic approach: Oral health-related quality of life assessed with 2 questionnaires.
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Pelo, Sandro, Gasparini, Giulio, Garagiola, Umberto, Cordaro, Massimo, Di Nardo, Francesco, Staderini, Edoardo, Patini, Romeo, de Angelis, Paolo, D'Amato, Giuseppe, Saponaro, Gianmarco, Moro, Alessandro, and D'Amato, Giuseppe
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Introduction: The purposes of the study were to investigate and evaluate the differences detected by the patients between the traditional orthognathic approach and the surgery-first one in terms of level of satisfaction and quality of life.Methods: A total of 30 patients who underwent orthognathic surgery for correction of malocclusions were selected and included in this study. Fifteen patients were treated with the conventional orthognathic surgery approach, and 15 patients with the surgery-first approach. Variables were assessed through the Orthognathic Quality of Life Questionnaire and the Oral Health Impact Profile questionnaire and analyzed with 2-way repeated-measures analysis of variance.Results: The results showed significant differences in terms of the Orthognathic Quality of Life Questionnaire (P <0.001) and the Oral Health Impact Profile (P <0.001) scores within groups between the first and last administrations of both questionnaires. Differences in the control group between first and second administrations were also significant. Questionnaire scores showed an immediate increase of quality of life after surgery in the surgery-first group and an initial worsening during orthodontic treatment in the traditional approach group followed by postoperative improvement.Conclusions: This study showed that the worsening of the facial profile during the traditional orthognathic surgery approach decompensation phase has a negative impact on the perception of patients' quality of life. Surgeons should consider the possibility of a surgery-first approach to prevent this occurrence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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7. Is child walking conditioned by gender? Surface EMG patterns in female and male children.
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Di Nardo, Francesco, Laureati, Giulio, Strazza, Annachiara, Mengarelli, Alessandro, Burattini, Laura, Agostini, Valentina, Nascimbeni, Alberto, Knaflitz, Marco, and Fioretti, Sandro
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WALKING , *ELECTROMYOGRAPHY , *SKELETAL muscle , *TIBIALIS anterior , *SCHOOL children , *ANKLE physiology , *SKELETAL muscle physiology , *GAIT in humans , *GENDER identity , *REFERENCE values , *RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
EMG-based differences between females and males during walking are generally acknowledged in adults. Aim of the study was the quantification of possible gender differences in myoelectric activity of gastrocnemius lateralis (GL) and tibialis anterior (TA) during walking in school-age children. Gender-related comparison with adults was also provided to get possible novel insight in maturation of gait. To this aim, Statistical gait analysis, a recent methodology performing a statistical characterization of gait by averaging spatial-temporal and surface-EMG-based parameters over hundreds of strides, was performed in100 healthy school-age children (C-group) and in 33 healthy young adults (YA-group). On average, 301±110 consecutive strides were analyzed for each subject. In C-group, no significant differences (p>0.05) were observed between females and males in GL and TA, considering mean onset/offset instants of activation and occurrence frequency. Stratifying the C-group for age, small differences between females and males in occurrence frequency of GL arose in oldest children. In YA-group, females showed a significant propensity for a more complex recruitment of TA and GL (higher number of activations during gait cycle, quantified by occurrence frequency) compared to males. These outcomes suggest that gender-related differences in sEMG parameters do not characterize the recruitment of GL and TA during child walking in early years (6-8 years), start occurring when adolescence is approaching (10-12 years), and are acknowledged in both ankle muscles only in adults. Present findings seem to support previous studies on maturation of gait which indicate adolescence as the time-range where gait is completing its maturation path. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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8. Co-contraction activity of ankle muscles during walking: A gender comparison.
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Mengarelli, Alessandro, Maranesi, Elvira, Burattini, Laura, Fioretti, Sandro, and Di Nardo, Francesco
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ANKLE fractures ,ANKLE lateral ligament ,JOINT injuries ,MUSCLE fatigue ,THERAPEUTICS ,INJURY risk factors - Abstract
The study aimed to assess possible differences between healthy, young males and females in co-contraction activity of tibialis anterior and gastrocnemius lateralis during gait at self-selected speed and cadence. The Statistical-Gait-Analysis methodology, allowing a statistical characterization of gait by averaging spatial-temporal and sEMG-based parameters over hundreds of strides per walking trial, was applied on thirty age-matched subjects: 15 males and 15 females. Co-contractions were assessed as the overlapping periods between muscular activities. Results showed the occurrence of four different co-contractions during gait cycle, for both groups. No significant differences in activation instants (ON-OFF) were detected between groups. Otherwise, all the co-contractions occurred in higher number of strides (%) in females, respect to males: in early stance (40.7 ± 18.7% vs. 18.9 ± 11.0%, p < 0.001), mid-stance (41.5 ± 15.2% vs. 26.0 ± 22.8%, p < 0.005), pre-swing (16.6 ± 7.3% vs. 7.1 ± 4.7%, p < 0.001), and swing (79.4 ± 13.7% vs. 55.6 ± 19.3%, p < 0.001). This overall higher occurrence of ankle-muscle co-contractions, associated to a more complex muscular recruitment, seems to reflect a female need for a higher level of ankle-joint stabilization. Thus, present findings indicated gender as a not negligible factor in the interpretation of muscular co-contraction variability during walking and suggested the suitability of gender-based approaches in clinical studies and in developing reference frameworks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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9. Normative EMG patterns of ankle muscle co-contractions in school-age children during gait.
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Di Nardo, Francesco, Mengarelli, Alessandro, Burattini, Laura, Maranesi, Elvira, Agostini, Valentina, Nascimbeni, Alberto, Knaflitz, Marco, and Fioretti, Sandro
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GAIT disorders in children , *ELECTROMYOGRAPHY , *ANKLE physiology , *MUSCLE contraction , *TIBIALIS anterior , *SKELETAL muscle , *SKELETAL muscle physiology , *GAIT in humans , *RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Purpose: The study was designed to assess the co-contractions of tibialis anterior (TA) and gastrocnemius lateralis (GL) in healthy school-age children during gait at self-selected speed and cadence, in terms of variability of onset-offset muscular activation and occurrence frequency.Methods: Statistical gait analysis, a recent methodology performing a statistical characterization of gait by averaging spatio-temporal and sEMG-based parameters over numerous strides, was performed in 100 healthy children, aged 6-11 years. Co-contractions were assessed as the period of overlap between activation intervals of TA and GL.Results: On average, 165±27 strides were analyzed for each child, resulting in approximately 16,500 strides. Results showed that GL and TA act as pure agonist/antagonists for ankle plantar/dorsiflexion (no co-contractions) in only 19.2±10.4% of strides. In the remaining strides, statistically significant (p<0.05) co-contractions appear in early stance (46.5±23.0% of the strides), mid-stance (28.8±15.9%), pre-swing (15.2±9.2%), and swing (73.2±22.6%). This significantly increased complexity in muscle recruitment strategy beyond the activation as pure ankle plantar/dorsiflexors, suggests that in healthy children co-contractions are likely functional to further physiological tasks as balance improvement and control of joint stability.Conclusions: This study represents the first attempt for the development in healthy children of a normative dataset for GL/TA co-contractions during gait, achieved on an exceptionally large number of strides in every child and in total. The present reference frame could be useful for discriminating physiological and pathological behavior in children and for designing more focused studies on the maturation of gait. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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10. Assessment of the variability of vastii myoelectric activity in young healthy females during walking: A statistical gait analysis.
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Di Nardo, Francesco, Maranesi, Elvira, Mengarelli, Alessandro, Ghetti, Giacomo, Burattini, Laura, and Fioretti, Sandro
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ELECTROMYOGRAPHY , *WALKING , *MOTOR ability , *VASTUS medialis , *QUADRICEPS muscle , *KINESIOLOGY - Abstract
The study was designed to assess the natural variability of the activation modalities of vastus medialis (VM) and vastus lateralis (VL) during walking at a self-selected speed and cadence of 30 young, healthy, females. This was achieved by conducting statistical gait analysis on the surface electromyographic signals from hundreds of strides for each subject. Results revealed variability in the number of activations, occurrence frequency, and onset-offset instants across the thousands of strides analyzed. However, despite the variability, there was one activation occurrence which remained consistent across subjects for both VM and VL. This occurred from terminal swing to the following loading response (observed in 100% of strides). A second, less frequent, activation occurred between mid-stance up to pre-swing (observed in 39.3 ± 22.4% of strides for VM and in 35.1 ± 20.6% for VL). No significant differences ( p > 0.05) were observed in the onset–offset instants or in the occurrence frequency, which suggest a simultaneous recruitment of VM and VL. This “normality” pattern represents the first attempt at developing a reference frame for vastii sEMG activity during walking, that is able to include the physiological variability of the phenomenon and control the confounding effects of age and gender. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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11. Gender differences in the myoelectric activity of lower limb muscles in young healthy subjects during walking.
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Di Nardo, Francesco, Mengarelli, Alessandro, Maranesi, Elvira, Burattini, Laura, and Fioretti, Sandro
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ELECTROMYOGRAPHY ,GAIT in humans ,SIGNAL processing ,LEG muscles ,MEDICAL databases ,SEX differences (Biology) - Abstract
The present study was designed to achieve a comprehensive analysis of gender-related differences in the myoelectric activity of lower limb muscles during normal walking at self-selected speed and cadence, in terms of muscle activation patterns and occurrence frequencies. To this aim, statistical gait analysis (SGA) of surface EMG signal from tibialis anterior (TA), gastrocnemius lateralis (GL), rectus femoris (RF), biceps femoris (BF) and vastus lateralis (VL) was performed in 11 female (F-group) and 11 male (M-group) age-matched healthy young adults. SGA is a recent methodology performing a statistical characterization of gait, by averaging spatio-temporal and sEMG-based parameters over numerous strides. Findings showed that males and females walk at the same comfortable speed, despite the significantly lower height and higher cadence detected in females. No significant differences in muscle onset/offset were detected between groups. The analysis of occurrence frequencies of muscle activity showed no significant differences in BF and RF, between groups. Conversely, in F-group, compared with M-group, GL, TA and VL showed a significantly higher occurrence frequency in the modalities with a high number of activations, and a significantly lower occurrence frequency in the modalities with a low number of activations. These findings indicate a propensity of females for a more complex recruitment of TA, GL and VL during walking, compared to males. The observed differences recommend the suitability of developing electromyographic databases, separated for males and females. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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12. Assessment of the ankle muscle co-contraction during normal gait: A surface electromyography study.
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Di Nardo, Francesco, Mengarelli, Alessandro, Maranesi, Elvira, Burattini, Laura, and Fioretti, Sandro
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ELECTROMYOGRAPHY , *SKELETAL muscle , *GAIT in humans , *PUBLIC health , *COMPLEXITY (Philosophy) - Abstract
The study was designed to assess the co-contractions of tibialis anterior (TA) and gastrocnemius lateralis (GL) in healthy young adults during gait at self-selected speed and cadence, in terms of variability of onset–offset muscular activation and occurrence frequency. Statistical gait analysis (SGA), a recent methodology performing a statistical characterization of gait by averaging spatio-temporal and EMG-based parameters over numerous strides, was performed in twenty-four healthy young adults. Co-contractions were assessed as the period of overlap between activation intervals of TA and GL. Results showed that GL and TA act as pure agonist/antagonists for ankle plantar/dorsiflexion (no co-contractions) in only 21.3 ± 8.2% of strides. In the remaining strides, statistically significant ( p < 0.05) co-contractions appear in early stance (29.2 ± 1.7%), mid-stance (32.1 ± 18.3%) and swing (62.2 ± 2.0%). This significantly increased complexity in muscle recruitment strategy beyond the activation as pure ankle plantar/dorsiflexors, suggests that co-contractions are likely functional to further physiological tasks as foot inversion, balance improvement, control of ankle stability and knee flexion. This study represents the first attempt for the development in healthy young adults of a “normality” reference frame for GL/TA co-contractions, able to include the physiological variability of the phenomenon and eliminate the confounding effect of age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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13. Pleomorphic adenoma and benign parotid tumors: extracapsular dissection vs superficial parotidectomy--review of literature and meta-analysis.
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Foresta, Enrico, Torroni, Andrea, Di Nardo, Francesco, de Waure, Chiara, Poscia, Andrea, Gasparini, Giulio, Marianetti, Tito Matteo, and Pelo, Sandro
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OBJECTIVE: This study compared extracapsular dissection (ED) vs superficial parotidectomy (SP) in the treatment of pleomorphic adenoma and benign parotid tumors. STUDY DESIGN: The research covered the years 1950-2011 in PubMed, Ovid MEDLINE, the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, and Scopus. Of 1152 articles screened, 123 studies met the inclusion criteria. A review of the nomenclature of the different parotid surgery techniques was done. Recurrence rate, permanent facial nerve paralysis, and Frey syndrome of patients who underwent ED vs those who underwent SP were compared by meta-analysis. RESULTS: Our meta-analysis data comparing ED and SP found that: (1) the recurrence rate is higher in patients treated with SP; (2) SP has a higher incidence of cranial nerve VII paralysis; and (3) Frey syndrome is more common after SP. CONCLUSIONS: ED may be a viable option in the treatment of unilateral benign parotid tumors of the superficial lobe, sized less than 4 cm, without involvement of the facial nerve. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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14. Assessment of the activation modalities of gastrocnemius lateralis and tibialis anterior during gait: A statistical analysis.
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Di Nardo, Francesco, Ghetti, Giacomo, and Fioretti, Sandro
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SKELETAL muscle , *TIBIALIS anterior , *HUMAN locomotion , *ELECTROMYOGRAPHY , *MUSCLE physiology , *STATISTICS - Abstract
Abstract: Aim of the study was to identify the different modalities of activation of gastrocnemius lateralis (GL) and tibialis anterior (TA) during gait at self-selected speed, by a statistical analysis of surface electromyographic signal from a large number (hundreds) of strides per subject. The analysis on fourteen healthy adults showed a large variability in the number of activation intervals, in their occurrence rate, and in the on-off instants, within different strides of the same walk. For each muscle, the assessment of the different modalities of activation (five for muscle) allowed to identify a single pattern, common for all the modalities and able to characterize the behavior of muscles during normal gait. The pattern of GL activity centered in two regions of the gait cycle: the transition between flat foot contact and push-off (observed in 100% of total strides) and the final swing (67.1±15.9%). Two regions characterized also the pattern of TA activity: from pre-swing to following loading response (100%), and the mid-stance (30.5±15.0%). This “normality” pattern represents the first attempt for the development in healthy young adults of a reference for dynamic EMG activity of GL and TA, in terms of variability of on-off muscular activity and occurrence rate during gait. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2013
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15. MATLAB-implemented estimation procedure for model-based assessment of hepatic insulin degradation from standard intravenous glucose tolerance test data
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Di Nardo, Francesco, Mengoni, Michele, and Morettini, Micaela
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ESTIMATION theory , *GLUCOSE tolerance tests , *GAUSS-Newton method , *ALGORITHMS ,INSULIN biodegradation - Abstract
Abstract: Present study provides a novel MATLAB-based parameter estimation procedure for individual assessment of hepatic insulin degradation (HID) process from standard frequently-sampled intravenous glucose tolerance test (FSIGTT) data. Direct access to the source code, offered by MATLAB, enabled us to design an optimization procedure based on the alternating use of Gauss-Newton''s and Levenberg-Marquardt''s algorithms, which assures the full convergence of the process and the containment of computational time. Reliability was tested by direct comparison with the application, in eighteen non-diabetic subjects, of well-known kinetic analysis software package SAAM II, and by application on different data. Agreement between MATLAB and SAAM II was warranted by intraclass correlation coefficients ≥0.73; no significant differences between corresponding mean parameter estimates and prediction of HID rate; and consistent residual analysis. Moreover, MATLAB optimization procedure resulted in a significant 51% reduction of CV% for the worst-estimated parameter by SAAM II and in maintaining all model-parameter CV% <20%. In conclusion, our MATLAB-based procedure was suggested as a suitable tool for the individual assessment of HID process. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2013
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16. Statistical analysis of surface electromyographic signal for the assessment of rectus femoris modalities of activation during gait
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Di Nardo, Francesco and Fioretti, Sandro
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RECTUS femoris muscles , *ELECTROMYOGRAPHY , *GAIT disorders , *SIGNAL theory , *STATISTICS , *KNEE abnormalities , *HIP joint , *STIFLE joint - Abstract
Abstract: Aim of the present study was to identify the different modalities of activation of rectus femoris (RF) during gait at self-selected speed, by a statistical analysis of surface electromyographic signal from a large number (hundreds) of strides per subject. The analysis of ten healthy adults showed that RF is characterized by different activation modalities within different strides of the same walk. RF most recurrent modality (observed in 53±6% of total strides) consists of three activations, at the beginning of gait cycle, around foot-off and in the terminal swing. Further two modalities of RF activation differ from the most recurrent one because of the lack of activity around foot-off (26±6%) or the splitting into two (or three) small activations around stance-to-swing transition (17±2%). Despite the large variability, our statistical analysis allowed to identify two patterns of activation that characterize completely the behavior of rectus femoris during gait. The first pattern, around stance-to-swing transition, can be monophasic, biphasic or triphasic and is necessary to control knee extension and hip flexion from pre-swing to initial swing. The second pattern, from terminal swing to following mid-stance, is likely due to the contribution of low-level RF activity and cross-talk from surrounding vastii. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2013
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17. Detection Rate of Recurrent Medullary Thyroid Carcinoma Using Fluorine-18 Dihydroxyphenylalanine Positron Emission Tomography: A Meta-analysis.
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Treglia, Giorgio, Cocciolillo, Fabrizio, Di Nardo, Francesco, Poscia, Andrea, de Waure, Chiara, Giordano, Alessandro, and Rufini, Vittoria
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Rationale and Objectives: The aim of this study was to perform a meta-analysis of published data about the diagnostic performance of
18 F-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) positron emission tomography (PET) or PET/computed tomography (CT) in detecting recurrent medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC). Materials and Methods: A comprehensive literature search of studies indexed in the PubMed/MEDLINE, Scopus, and Embase databases through January 2012 and regarding18 F-DOPA PET or PET/CT in patients with suspected recurrent MTC was carried out. Pooled detection rates (DR) in per patient and per lesion analyses were calculated. A subanalysis considering serum levels of calcitonin and carcinoembryonic antigen, device used, and carbidopa pretreatment was also performed. Results: Eight studies including 146 patients with suspected recurrent MTC were included. The DRs of18 F-DOPA PET and PET/CT in per patient and per lesion analyses were 66% and 71%, respectively. DRs significantly increased in patients with serum calcitonin ≥1000 ng/L (86%) and calcitonin doubling times <24 months (86%). Conclusions: Fluorine-18-DOPA PET and PET/CT may be useful functional imaging methods in detecting recurrent MTC. The DR of recurrent MTC using these imaging methods increases in patients with higher calcitonin levels and lower calcitonin doubling times. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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18. Assessment of hepatic insulin degradation, in normoglycemic hypertensive patients, by minimal modelling of standard intravenous glucose tolerance test data
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Di Nardo, Francesco, Boemi, Massimo, and Burattini, Roberto
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HYPERTENSION , *PATIENTS , *GLUCOSE tolerance tests , *DATA analysis , *MATHEMATICAL models , *INSULIN resistance , *MEDICAL statistics , *BODY mass index ,INSULIN biodegradation - Abstract
Abstract: Role of hepatic insulin degradation in modulating insulin delivery to peripheral circulation, in insulin-resistant hypertensive patients, is not yet fully understood. This issue was investigated here by a novel application to hypertension of a previously proposed minimal modelling of insulin and C-peptide data, using population values for insulin and C-peptide kinetics parameters. Data, from frequently sampled intravenous glucose tolerance test (FSIGTT), were analysed in ten normoglycemic, hypertensive patients (H-group), compared with eight normoglycemic, normotensive subjects (N-group), matched for age, gender and body mass index. Minimal modelling of C-peptide and insulin data provided β-cell responsiveness to glucose perturbation (first, Φ 1, second, Φ 2, and basal, Φ b , phase), insulin secretion rate, ISR(t) and total pre-hepatic insulin secretion, TIS, as well as insulin delivery rate, IDR(t), and total insulin delivery, TID, into plasma, over 5-h test. Instantaneous normalized hepatic insulin degradation rate was computed as HIDR(t)=1−[IDR(t)/ISR(t)]. In our H-group, insulin sensitivity, S I , assessed by minimal model of glucose kinetics, showed a 56% reduction, which confirmed deterioration of insulin action in hypertension. This was associated with significant increase in Φ 1 (105%), TIS (55%) and TID (62%). No significant alterations were observed in other characteristic parameters of secretion and hepatic degradation of insulin, such that no significant difference was observed in HIDR(t) between our H and N groups. In conclusion, an increase of first phase and total insulin secretion occurring, in our H-group, in the presence of no alteration of hepatic insulin degradation, resulted in up-regulation of total insulin delivered to plasma (TID) for insulin-resistance compensation. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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19. Insulin resistance in hypertension quantified by oral glucose tolerance test: comparison of methods.
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Di Nardo, Francesco, Casagrande, Fabrizio, Boemi, Massimo, Fumelli, Paolo, Morosini, Pierpaolo, and Burattini, Roberto
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DIAGNOSIS of diabetes ,HYPOGLYCEMIC agents ,GLUCOSE tolerance tests ,BLOOD sugar - Abstract
Abstract: Four methods reported in the literature for evaluation of insulin sensitivity indexes from oral glucose tolerance tests (OGTTs) were analyzed and compared in order to test their ability to discriminate the insulin-resistant state in hypertension. To this aim, 15 normoglycemic subjects, not affected by metabolic syndrome, underwent a 22-sample, 300-minute OGTT. Eight subjects were normotensive (mean age, 47.0 ± 4.2 years) and 7 were hypertensive (mean age, 53.6 ± 1.6 years). The following insulin sensitivity indexes were computed and compared: (a) 2 indexes, IS
IE22/300 and ISIE8/180 , provided by an integral equation (IE) method applied to the full OGTT and to a reduced 8-sample, 180-minute data subset, respectively; (b) 2 indexes, ISOGIS180 and ISOGIS120 , computed by the oral glucose, insulin sensitivity (OGIS) method, which only requires 3 blood samples taken within 180 and 120 minutes, respectively; (c) an index, ISISI , which considers fasting and mean insulinemia and glycemia measured during a 5-sample, 120-minute OGTT; and (d) an index, ISMCR , which considers body mass index and requires 2 blood samples taken within 120 minutes. Except the ISOGIS180 , all other indexes were able to detect a significant reduction (unpaired Student t test, P < .05) of insulin sensitivity in our hypertensive group compared with the normotensive group. Failure of ISOGIS180 was explained by the fact that this index did not capture the information portrayed by the peak of insulinemia in hypertensive patients, which occurred around the 90th minute. Intraclass correlation coefficients higher than 0.89 demonstrated a substantial agreement between ISIE22/300 and ISIE8/180 indexes. These are the only indexes characterized by units of measure consistent with the definition of insulin sensitivity as the ability of insulin to enhance glucose effectiveness. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]- Published
- 2006
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20. Influence of EMG-signal processing and experimental set-up on prediction of gait events by neural network.
- Author
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Di Nardo, Francesco, Morbidoni, Christian, Cucchiarelli, Alessandro, and Fioretti, Sandro
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FORECASTING - Abstract
• A neural-network (NN) approach to assess gait events from sEMG signal was proposed. • The influence on NN performances of different sEMG-signal processing is tested. • Linear envelope (cut-off frequency = 5 Hz) allows to achieve the best NN performances. • The effect of decreasing sEMG-probe number included in the set-up is also tested. • Reducing to two distal-leg probes seems a good compromise to meet clinical needs. Machine-learning approaches are satisfactorily implemented for classifying and assessing gait events from only surface electromyographic (sEMG) signals during walking. However, it is acknowledged that the choice of sEMG-processing type may affect the reliability of methodologies based on it. Analogously, the number of sEMG signals involved in machine-learning procedure could influence the classification process. Aim of this study is to quantify the impact of different EMGsignal- processing specifications and/or different complexity of the experimental sEMG-protocol (different number of sEMG-sensors) on the performance of a neural-network-based approach for binary classifying gait phases and predicting gait-event timing. To this purpose, sEMG signals are collected from eight leg-muscles in about 10.000 strides from 23 healthy adults during walking and then fed to a multi-layer perceptron model. Four different signal-processing approaches are tested and five experimental set-ups (from four to one sEMG sensors per leg) are compared. Results indicate that both the choice of sEMG processing and the reduction of sEMG-protocol complexity actually affect classification/prediction performances. Moreover, the study succeeds in the double goal of identifying the linear envelope as the sEMG-processing type which reaches the best neural-network performance (classification accuracy of 93.4 ± 2.3 %; mean absolute error 21.6 ± 7.0 and 38.1 ± 15.2 ms for heel-strike/toe-off prediction, respectively) and providing a quantification of the progressive deterioration of classification/prediction performances with the reduction of the number of sensors used (from 93.4 ± 2.3%–79.9 ± 6.1 % for classification accuracy). These findings could be very useful for clinics to the aim of choosing the most suitable approach balancing technical performances, patient comfort, and clinical needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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21. Co-activation patterns of gastrocnemius and quadriceps femoris in controlling the knee joint during walking.
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Mengarelli, Alessandro, Gentili, Andrea, Strazza, Annachiara, Burattini, Laura, Fioretti, Sandro, and Di Nardo, Francesco
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SKELETAL muscle , *QUADRICEPS muscle , *PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of walking , *ANTERIOR compartment syndrome , *KNEE diseases - Abstract
Muscular co-activation is a well-known mechanism for lower limb joint stabilization in both healthy and pathological individuals. This muscular feature appears particularly important for the knee joint, not only during challenging motor tasks such as cutting and landing but also during walking, due to knee cyclic loading. Gastrocnemius acts on the knee joint with a flexor activity and co-activations with quadriceps muscles lead to greater knee ligament strain with respect to an isolated burst of either muscle. Thus, this study aimed to assess possible co-activations between gastrocnemius and quadriceps muscles during walking. Five co-activation periods were assessed: during early stance (identified in 5.7 ± 5.1% of total strides), early and late foot-contact (88.9 ± 8.9% and 8.9 ± 8.2%), push-off (23.9 ± 12.2%) and late swing (29.0 ± 16.1%). Outcomes showed that late foot-contact and swing co-activations could deserve particular attention: in both cases the knee joint was close to the full extension (around 3.5° and 6°, respectively) and thus, considering also the anterior tibia translation due to the quadriceps activity, the simultaneous gastrocnemius burst could lead to an enhanced knee ligaments elongation. Findings of this study represent the first attempt to provide a reference knee joint co-activation framework, useful also for further evaluation in cohorts with knee failures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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22. Balance assessment during squatting exercise: A comparison between laboratory grade force plate and a commercial, low-cost device.
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Mengarelli, Alessandro, Verdini, Federica, Cardarelli, Stefano, Di Nardo, Francesco, Burattini, Laura, and Fioretti, Sandro
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SQUAT (Weight lifting) , *POSTURAL balance , *TREATMENT programs , *MOTOR ability , *NINTENDO Wii Fit games - Abstract
Testing balance through squatting exercise is a central part of many rehabilitation programs and sports and plays also an important role in clinical evaluation of residual motor ability. The assessment of center of pressure (CoP) displacement and its parametrization is commonly used to describe and analyze squat movement and the laboratory-grade force plates (FP) are the gold standard for measuring balance performances from a dynamic view-point. However, the Nintendo Wii Balance Board (NWBB) has been recently proposed as an inexpensive and easily available device for measuring ground reaction force and CoP displacement in standing balance tasks. Thus, this study aimed to compare the NWBB-CoP data with those obtained from a laboratory FP during a dynamic motor task, such as the squat task. CoP data of forty-eight subjects were acquired simultaneously from a NWBB and a FP and the analyses were performed over the descending squatting phase. Outcomes showed a very high correlation ( r ) and limited root-mean-square differences between CoP trajectories in anterior-posterior ( r > 0.99, 1.63 ± 1.27 mm) and medial-lateral ( r > 0.98, 1.01 ± 0.75 mm) direction. Spatial parameters computed from CoP displacement and ground reaction force peak presented fixed biases between NWBB and FP. Errors showed a high consistency (standard deviation < 2.4% of the FP outcomes) and a random spread distribution around the mean difference. Mean velocity is the only parameter which exhibited a tendency towards proportional values. Findings of this study suggested the NWBB as a valid device for the assessment and parametrization of CoP displacement during squatting movement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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23. Surface-EMG analysis for the quantification of thigh muscle dynamic co-contractions during normal gait.
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Strazza, Annachiara, Mengarelli, Alessandro, Fioretti, Sandro, Burattini, Laura, Agostini, Valentina, Knaflitz, Marco, and Di Nardo, Francesco
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QUADRICEPS muscle , *GAIT in humans , *WALKING , *HAMSTRING muscle , *VASTUS lateralis , *THIGH , *QUADRICEPS muscle physiology , *SKELETAL muscle physiology , *COMPARATIVE studies , *ELECTROMYOGRAPHY , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MUSCLE contraction , *REFERENCE values , *RESEARCH , *EVALUATION research , *PHYSIOLOGY ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
The research purpose was to quantify the co-contraction patterns of quadriceps femoris (QF) vs. hamstring muscles during free walking, in terms of onset-offset muscular activation, excitation intensity, and occurrence frequency. Statistical gait analysis was performed on surface-EMG signals from vastus lateralis (VL), rectus femoris (RF), and medial hamstrings (MH), in 16315 strides walked by 30 healthy young adults. Results showed full superimpositions of MH with both VL and RF activity from terminal swing, 80 to 100% of gait cycle (GC), to the successive loading response (≈0-15% of GC), in around 90% of the considered strides. A further superimposition was detected during the push-off phase both between VL and MH activation intervals (38.6±12.8% to 44.1±9.6% of GC) in 21.9±13.6% of strides, and between RF and MH activation intervals (45.9±5.3% to 50.7±9.7 of GC) in 32.7±15.1% of strides. These findings led to identify three different co-contractions among QF and hamstring muscles during able-bodied walking: in early stance (in ≈90% of strides), in push-off (in 25-30% of strides) and in terminal swing (in ≈90% of strides). The co-contraction in terminal swing is the one with the highest levels of muscle excitation intensity. To our knowledge, this analysis represents the first attempt for quantification of QF/hamstring muscles co-contraction in young healthy subjects during normal gait, able to include the physiological variability of the phenomenon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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24. Extracorporeal Photopheresis for Second-Line Treatment of Chronic Graft-versus-Host Diseases: Results from a Health Technology Assessment in Italy.
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de Waure, Chiara, Capri, Stefano, Veneziano, Maria Assunta, Specchia, Maria Lucia, Cadeddu, Chiara, Di Nardo, Francesco, Ferriero, Anna Maria, Gennari, Francesca, Hamilton, Colette, Mancuso, Agostino, Quaranta, Gianluigi, Raponi, Matteo, Valerio, Luca, Gensini, Gianfranco, and Ricciardi, Walter
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GRAFT versus host disease , *MEDICAL care costs , *DISEASE progression , *STEROID drugs , *COMPARATIVE studies , *MARKOV processes , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Objectives To develop a comparative, cost-effectiveness, and budget impact analysis of Therakos online extracorporeal photopheresis (ECP) compared with the main alternatives used for the treatment of steroid-refractory/resistant chronic graft-versus-host disease (cGvHD) in Italy. Methods The current therapeutic pathway was identified by searching medical databases and from the results of a survey of practice in Italian clinical reference centers. A systematic review was performed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of second-line alternatives. Budget impact and cost-effectiveness analyses were performed from the Italian National Health Service perspective over a 7-year time horizon through the adaption of a Markov model. The following health states were considered: complete and partial response, stable disease, and progression. A discount rate of 3% was applied to costs and outcomes. Results The most common alternatives used in Italy for the management of steroid-refractory/resistant cGvHD were ECP, mycophenolate, pentostatin, and imatinib. The literature review highlighted that complete and partial responses are higher with ECP than with the alternatives while serious adverse events are less common. The economic analysis showed that Therakos online ECP represents the dominating alternative, in that it delivers greater benefit at a lower cost. In fact, according to the alternatives considered, cost saving ranged from €3237.09 to €19,903.51 per patient with 0.04 to 0.21 quality-adjusted life-year gained. Conclusions Therakos online ECP should be considered an effective, safe, and cost-effective alternative in steroid-refractory/resistant cGvHD. There is inequality in access, and a dedicated reimbursement tariff, however, should be introduced to overcome these barriers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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25. Optimal time-points for minimal residual disease monitoring change on the basis of the method used in patients with acute myeloid leukemia who underwent allogeneic stem cell transplantation: A comparison between multiparameter flow cytometry and Wilms’ tumor 1 expression
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Rossi, Giovanni, Carella, Angelo Michele, Minervini, Maria Marta, di Nardo, Francesco, Waure, Chiara de, Greco, Michele Mario, Merla, Emanuela, Cillis, Giovanni Pio de, Di Renzo, Nicola, Melpignano, Angela, Capalbo, Silvana, Palumbo, Gaetano, Pisapia, Giovanni, and Cascavilla, Nicola
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ACUTE myeloid leukemia treatment , *STEM cell transplantation , *FLOW cytometry , *TUMOR suppressor genes , *GENE expression , *ONCOLOGY , *CANCER research - Abstract
Minimal residual disease (MRD) of 30 adult AML patients was monitored by multiparameter flow cytometry (MFC) and WT1 expression before and after allogeneic stem cell transplantation (allo-SCT). Diagnostic performance of pre-transplant MRD measured by MFC was higher than that obtained by WT1 expression. Comparable results were displayed at day +30 post-transplant, while better values by WT1 compared to MFC were found at day +90. Positive MRD by MFC predicted a shorter disease free survival (DFS) before and 1 month after transplant ( p = 0.006 and p = 0.005), while only high WT1 levels at 1 month from the transplant significantly impacted on DFS ( p = 0.010). Our results support the idea that MRD monitoring by MFC should be suggested before and 30 days after the transplant, while WT1 expression should be preferred after this procedure. The assessment of MRD at day +30 from allo-SCT is recommended as post transplant check-point for the predictive role displayed, independently of the method used. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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26. Comparison between multiparameter flow cytometry and WT1-RNA quantification in monitoring minimal residual disease in acute myeloid leukemia without specific molecular targets
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Rossi, Giovanni, Minervini, Maria Marta, Carella, Angelo Michele, de Waure, Chiara, di Nardo, Francesco, Melillo, Lorella, D’Arena, Giovanni, Zini, Gina, and Cascavilla, Nicola
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ACUTE myeloid leukemia , *FLOW cytometry , *CANCER relapse , *POLYMERASE chain reaction , *SENSITIVITY analysis , *CLINICAL trials , *DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Abstract: Despite a high remission rate, a significant number of patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) relapse. Thus, the evaluation of minimal residual disease (MRD) in AML is an important strategy to better identify high risk patients. Most sensitive methodology to detect MRD is molecular polymerase chain reaction (PCR) but its applicability is restricted to AML with leukemia-specific molecular targets (e.g. AML1-ETO, CBFB-MYH11, MLL, FLT-3). In our study, MRD was monitored at different time points with both MFC and WT1-RNA quantification in 23 AML patients who did not present specific molecular targets. As previously published, we considered values of 10−3 (0.1%) in MFC and 90 WT1-RNA ×104 ABL copies as optimal thresholds. Receiver operating characteristics (ROC) analysis was used to confirm these data. To realize the methodology that better identify high risk patients, an analysis of sensitivity, specificity, predictive values (PV) and likelihood ratio (LR) was provided and similar results were showed. MRD levels ≥10−3 in MFC as well MRD levels ≥90 WT1-RNA copies in RQ-PCR, identify risk groups of patients with poor prognosis. Therefore, MFC and WT1-RNA quantification showed a comparable capacity in terms of technical performance and clinical significance to identify high risk patients who eventually relapsed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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