14 results on '"Avanzino, L"'
Search Results
2. Quality of sleep in primary focal dystonia: a case-control study
- Author
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Avanzino, L., primary, Martino, D., additional, Marchese, R., additional, Aniello, M. S., additional, Minafra, B., additional, Superbo, M., additional, Defazio, G., additional, and Abbruzzese, G., additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. External shock waves therapy in dystonia: preliminary results
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Trompetto, C., primary, Avanzino, L., additional, Bove, M., additional, Marinelli, L., additional, Molfetta, L., additional, Trentini, R., additional, and Abbruzzese, G., additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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4. DRD3 Ser9Gly variant is not associated with essential tremor in a series of Italian patients
- Author
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Vitale, C., primary, Gulli, R., additional, Ciotti, P., additional, Scaglione, C., additional, Bellone, E., additional, Avanzino, L., additional, Lantieri, F., additional, Abbruzzese, G., additional, Martinelli, P., additional, Barone, P., additional, and Mandich, P., additional
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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5. Intrafusal effects of botulinum toxin in post‐stroke upper limb spasticity
- Author
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Trompetto, C., primary, Bove, M., additional, Avanzino, L., additional, Francavilla, G., additional, Berardelli, A., additional, and Abbruzzese, G., additional
- Published
- 2008
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6. Intracortical circuits modulate transcallosal inhibition in humans
- Author
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Avanzino, L., primary, Teo, J. T. H., additional, and Rothwell, J. C., additional
- Published
- 2007
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7. Spread of dystonia in patients with idiopathic adult-onset laryngeal dystonia
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Giovanni Fabbrini, Ugo Cesari, Marcello Esposito, Anna Rita Bentivoglio, Giovanni Defazio, Alfredo Berardelli, Cesa Scaglione, Maurizio Zibetti, Marinella Turla, Marcello Romano, Laura Fadda, Roberto Erro, Tommaso Schirinzi, Stefano Peluso, Giovanni Cossu, Laura Avanzino, M. Coletti Moja, Roberto Eleopra, Paolo Barone, Gina Ferrazzano, Francesca Morgante, Brigida Minafra, Martina Petracca, Angelo Fabio Gigante, Esposito, M., Fabbrini, G., Ferrazzano, G., Berardelli, A., Peluso, S., Cesari, U., Gigante, A. F., Bentivoglio, A. R., Petracca, M., Erro, R., Barone, P., Schirinzi, T., Eleopra, R., Avanzino, L., Romano, M., Scaglione, C. L., Cossu, G., Morgante, F., Minafra, B., Zibetti, M., Coletti Moja, M., Turla, M., Fadda, L., and Defazio, G.
- Subjects
Male ,Registrie ,0301 basic medicine ,Larynx ,Pediatrics ,adult focal dystonia ,laryngeal dystonia ,spread ,Age Factors ,Age of Onset ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Disease Progression ,Dystonia ,Dystonic Disorders ,Female ,Humans ,Italy ,Laryngeal Diseases ,Middle Aged ,Registries ,Sex Factors ,0302 clinical medicine ,80 and over ,Age Factor ,Laryngeal dystonia ,Dystonic Disorder ,Italian population ,Settore MED/26 - NEUROLOGIA ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Laryngeal Disease ,Neurology ,Body region ,medicine.symptom ,Human ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Blepharospasm ,03 medical and health sciences ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,In patient ,Neurology (clinical) ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical progression - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Adult-onset laryngeal dystonia (LD) can be isolated or can be associated with dystonia in other body parts. Combined forms can be segmental at the onset or can result from dystonia spread to or from the larynx. The aim of this study was to identify the main clinical and demographic features of adult-onset idiopathic LD in an Italian population with special focus on dystonia spread. METHODS: Data were obtained from the Italian Dystonia Registry (IDR) produced by 37 Italian institutions. Clinical and demographic data of 71 patients with idiopathic adult-onset LD were extracted from a pool of 1131 subjects included in the IDR. RESULTS: Fifty of 71 patients presented a laryngeal focal onset; the remaining subjects had onset in other body regions and later laryngeal spread. The two groups did not show significant differences of demographic features. 32% of patients with laryngeal onset reported spread to contiguous body regions afterwards and in most cases (12 of 16 subjects) dystonia started to spread within 1 year from the onset. LD patients who remained focal and those who had dystonia spread did not show other differences. CONCLUSIONS: Data from IDR show that dystonic patients with focal laryngeal onset will present spread in almost one-third of cases. Spread from the larynx occurs early and is directed to contiguous body regions showing similarities with clinical progression of blepharospasm. This study gives a new accurate description of LD phenomenology that may contribute to improving the comprehension of dystonia pathophysiology.
- Published
- 2018
8. Family History in Parkinson's Disease: A National Cross-Sectional Study.
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Arienti F, Casazza G, Franco G, Lazzeri G, Monfrini E, Di Maio A, Erro R, Barone P, Tamma F, Caputo E, Volontè MA, Cacciaguerra L, Pilotto A, Padovani A, Comi C, Magistrelli L, Valzania F, Cavallieri F, Avanzino L, Marchese R, Sensi M, Carroli G, Eleopra R, Cilia R, Spagnolo F, Tessitore A, De Micco R, Ceravolo R, Palermo G, Malaguti MC, Lopiano L, Tocco P, Sorbera C, Tinazzi M, Ciammola A, Ottaviani D, Valente EM, Albanese A, Blandini F, Canesi M, Antonini A, Carecchio M, Fetoni V, Colosimo C, Volpe D, Tambasco N, Cossu G, Zappia M, and Di Fonzo A
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- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Male, Female, Aged, Middle Aged, Italy epidemiology, Age of Onset, Risk Factors, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Prevalence, Parkinson Disease genetics, Parkinson Disease epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Family history of Parkinson's disease (PD) is a common finding in PD patients. However, a few studies have systematically examined this aspect., Objectives: We investigated the family history of PD patients, comparing demographic and clinical features between familial PD (fPD) and sporadic PD (sPD)., Methods: A cross-sectional study enrolling 2035 PD patients was conducted in 28 Italian centers. Clinical data and family history up to the third degree of kinship were collected., Results: Family history of PD was determined in 21.9% of patients. fPD patients had earlier age at onset than sporadic patients. No relevant differences in the prevalence of motor and nonmotor symptoms were detected. Family history of mood disorders resulted more prevalently in the fPD group., Conclusions: fPD was found to recur more frequently than previously reported. Family history collection beyond the core family is essential to discover disease clusters and identify novel risk factors for PD., (© 2024 The Author(s). Movement Disorders Clinical Practice published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.)
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- 2024
- Full Text
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9. How Does Postural Control in Patients with Functional Motor Disorders Adapt to Multitasking-Based Immersive Virtual Reality?
- Author
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Gandolfi M, Sandri A, Menaspà Z, Avanzino L, Pelosin E, Geroin C, Vidale D, Fiorio M, and Tinazzi M
- Subjects
- Humans, Movement physiology, Postural Balance physiology, Learning, Motor Disorders, Virtual Reality
- Abstract
Background: Motor symptoms in functional motor disorders (FMDs) refer to involuntary, but learned, altered movement patterns associated with aberrant self-focus, sense of agency, and belief/expectations. These conditions commonly lead to impaired posture control, raising the likelihood of falls and disability. Utilizing visual and cognitive tasks to manipulate attentional focus, virtual reality (VR) integrated with posturography is a promising tool for exploring postural control disorders., Objectives: To investigate whether postural control can be adapted by manipulating attentional focus in a 3D immersive VR environment., Methods: We compared postural parameters in 17 FMDs patients and 19 age-matched healthy controls over a single session under four increasingly more complex and attention-demanding conditions: simple fixation task (1) in the real room and (2) in 3D VR room-like condition; complex fixation task in a 3D VR city-like condition (3) avoiding distractors and (4) counting them. Dual-task effect (DTE) measured the relative change in performance induced by the different attention-demanding conditions on postural parameters., Results: Patients reduced sway area and mediolateral center of pressure displacement velocity DTE compared to controls (all, P < 0.049), but only under condition 4. They also showed a significant reduction in the sway area DTE under condition 4 compared to condition 3 (P = 0.025)., Conclusions: This study provides novel preliminary evidence for the value of a 3D immersive VR environment combined with different attention-demanding conditions in adapting postural control in patients with FMDs. As supported by quantitative and objective posturographic measures, our findings may inform interventions to explore FMDs pathophysiology., (© 2023 The Authors. Movement Disorders Clinical Practice published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.)
- Published
- 2024
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10. Dominant VPS16 Pathogenic Variants: Not Only Isolated Dystonia.
- Author
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Monfrini E, Avanzino L, Palermo G, Bonato G, Brescia G, Ceravolo R, Cantarella G, Mandich P, Prokisch H, Storm Van's Gravesande K, Straccia G, Elia A, Reale C, Panteghini C, Zorzi G, Eleopra R, Erro R, Carecchio M, Garavaglia B, Zech M, Romito L, and Di Fonzo A
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- Humans, Vesicular Transport Proteins, Dystonia diagnosis, Gait Disorders, Neurologic, Deep Brain Stimulation methods, Parkinson Disease, Dystonic Disorders diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: VPS16 pathogenic variants have been recently associated with inherited dystonia. Most patients affected by dominant VPS16-related disease display early-onset isolated dystonia with prominent oromandibular, bulbar, cervical, and upper limb involvement, followed by slowly progressive generalization., Cases: We describe six newly reported dystonic patients carrying VPS16 mutations displaying unusual phenotypic features in addition to dystonia, such as myoclonus, choreoathetosis, pharyngospasm and freezing of gait. Response to bilateral Globus Pallidus Internus Deep Brain Stimulation (GPi-DBS) is reported in three of them, associated with significant improvement of dystonia but only minor effect on other hyperkinetic movements. Moreover, five novel pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants are described., Conclusions: This case collection expands the genetic and clinical spectrum of VPS16-related disease, prompting movement disorder specialists to suspect mutations of this gene not only in patients with isolated dystonia., (© 2023 The Authors. Movement Disorders Clinical Practice published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.)
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
11. Frequency-dependent modulation of neural oscillations across the gait cycle.
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Zhao M, Bonassi G, Samogin J, Taberna GA, Pelosin E, Nieuwboer A, Avanzino L, and Mantini D
- Subjects
- Electroencephalography, Gait physiology, Humans, Walking physiology, Motor Cortex physiology, Sensorimotor Cortex
- Abstract
Balance and walking are fundamental to support common daily activities. Relatively accurate characterizations of normal and impaired gait features were attained at the kinematic and muscular levels. Conversely, the neural processes underlying gait dynamics still need to be elucidated. To shed light on gait-related modulations of neural activity, we collected high-density electroencephalography (hdEEG) signals and ankle acceleration data in young healthy participants during treadmill walking. We used the ankle acceleration data to segment each gait cycle in four phases: initial double support, right leg swing, final double support, left leg swing. Then, we processed hdEEG signals to extract neural oscillations in alpha, beta, and gamma bands, and examined event-related desynchronization/synchronization (ERD/ERS) across gait phases. Our results showed that ERD/ERS modulations for alpha, beta, and gamma bands were strongest in the primary sensorimotor cortex (M1), but were also found in premotor cortex, thalamus and cerebellum. We observed a modulation of neural oscillations across gait phases in M1 and cerebellum, and an interaction between frequency band and gait phase in premotor cortex and thalamus. Furthermore, an ERD/ERS lateralization effect was present in M1 for the alpha and beta bands, and in the cerebellum for the beta and gamma bands. Overall, our findings demonstrate that an electrophysiological source imaging approach based on hdEEG can be used to investigate dynamic neural processes of gait control. Future work on the development of mobile hdEEG-based brain-body imaging platforms may enable overground walking investigations, with potential applications in the study of gait disorders., (© 2022 The Authors. Human Brain Mapping published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2022
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12. Investigating the spectral features of the brain meso-scale structure at rest.
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Iandolo R, Semprini M, Sona D, Mantini D, Avanzino L, and Chiappalone M
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Brain physiology, Brain Waves physiology, Connectome, Electroencephalography, Nerve Net physiology
- Abstract
Recent studies provide novel insights into the meso-scale organization of the brain, highlighting the co-occurrence of different structures: classic assortative (modular), disassortative, and core-periphery. However, the spectral properties of the brain meso-scale remain mostly unexplored. To fill this knowledge gap, we investigated how the meso-scale structure is organized across the frequency domain. We analyzed the resting state activity of healthy participants with source-localized high-density electroencephalography signals. Then, we inferred the community structure using weighted stochastic block-model (WSBM) to capture the landscape of meso-scale structures across the frequency domain. We found that different meso-scale modalities co-exist and are diversely organized over the frequency spectrum. Specifically, we found a core-periphery structure dominance, but we also highlighted a selective increase of disassortativity in the low frequency bands (<8 Hz), and of assortativity in the high frequency band (30-50 Hz). We further described other features of the meso-scale organization by identifying those brain regions which, at the same time, (a) exhibited the highest degree of assortativity, disassortativity, and core-peripheriness (i.e., participation) and (b) were consistently assigned to the same community, irrespective from the granularity imposed by WSBM (i.e., granularity-invariance). In conclusion, we observed that the brain spontaneous activity shows frequency-specific meso-scale organization, which may support spatially distributed and local information processing., (© 2021 The Authors. Human Brain Mapping published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2021
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13. Modulation of neural oscillations during working memory update, maintenance, and readout: An hdEEG study.
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Semprini M, Bonassi G, Barban F, Pelosin E, Iandolo R, Chiappalone M, Mantini D, and Avanzino L
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- Adult, Female, Frontal Lobe physiology, Humans, Insular Cortex physiology, Male, Brain Waves physiology, Cerebellum physiology, Cerebral Cortex physiology, Cortical Synchronization physiology, Electroencephalography methods, Memory, Short-Term physiology, Nerve Net physiology
- Abstract
Working memory (WM) performance is very often measured using the n-back task, in which the participant is presented with a sequence of stimuli, and required to indicate whether the current stimulus matches the one presented n steps earlier. In this study, we used high-density electroencephalography (hdEEG) coupled to source localization to obtain information on spatial distribution and temporal dynamics of neural oscillations associated with WM update, maintenance and readout. Specifically, we a priori selected regions from a large fronto-parietal network, including also the insula and the cerebellum, and we analyzed modulation of neural oscillations by event-related desynchronization and synchronization (ERD/ERS). During update and readout, we found larger θ ERS and smaller β ERS respect to maintenance in all the selected areas. γ
LOW and γHIGH bands oscillations decreased in the frontal and insular cortices of the left hemisphere. In the maintenance phase we observed decreased θ oscillations and increased β oscillations (ERS) in most of the selected posterior areas and focally increased oscillations in γLOW and γHIGH bands in the frontal and insular cortices of the left hemisphere. Finally, during WM readout, we also found a focal modulation of the γLOW band in the left fusiform cortex and cerebellum, depending on the response trial type (true positive vs. true negative). Overall, our study demonstrated specific spectral signatures associated with updating of memory information, WM maintenance, and readout, with relatively high spatial resolution., (© 2020 The Authors. Human Brain Mapping published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)- Published
- 2021
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14. Quality of sleep in primary focal dystonia: a case-control study.
- Author
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Avanzino L, Martino D, Marchese R, Aniello MS, Minafra B, Superbo M, Defazio G, and Abbruzzese G
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- Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Blepharospasm diagnosis, Case-Control Studies, Depression complications, Depression diagnosis, Dystonic Disorders diagnosis, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Severity of Illness Index, Sex Factors, Sleep Wake Disorders diagnosis, Sleep Wake Disorders drug therapy, Torticollis diagnosis, Blepharospasm complications, Dystonic Disorders complications, Sleep Wake Disorders complications, Torticollis complications
- Abstract
Background: Sleep disturbances are common in patients with movement disorders. Evaluating quality of sleep is of primary importance because of the effect that nocturnal and daytime sleep abnormalities exert on general health status. However, quality of sleep has never been addressed in detail in patients with dystonia. The aim of this case-control study was to analyse quality of sleep in patients with the two most common forms of primary focal dystonia, blepharospasm (BSP) and cervical dystonia (CD)., Methods: We evaluated quality of sleep (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, PSQI) and excessive daytime sleepiness (Epworth Sleepiness Scale, ESS) in 98 patients with focal adult-onset dystonia (52 with BSP; 46 with CD) and in a group of 56 age-and gender-matched healthy subjects. The Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) was used for the evaluation of depressive symptomatology., Results: Quality of sleep was impaired (significantly higher PSQI scores) in both groups of patients. However, differences in PSQI scores between patients with CD and control subjects were partly confounded by BDI scores, whereas differences in PSQI scores between patients with BSP and control subjects were not influenced by BDI. Excessive daytime sleepiness was not significantly more frequent than in control subjects in either patients with BSP or patients with CD., Conclusions: This study suggests that the assessment and treatment of insomnia-related complaints should be considered in global management plans of patients with focal dystonia, particularly in those affected by BSP.
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- 2010
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