366 results on '"Marco, Rovaris"'
Search Results
2. Increased concentrations of P2X7R in oligodendrocyte derived extracellular vesicles of Multiple sclerosis patients
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Cristina Agliardi, Franca Rosa Guerini, Milena Zanzottera, Elisabetta Bolognesi, Domenico Caputo, Marco Rovaris, and Mario Clerici
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Multiple sclerosis ,P2X7R ,Oligodendrocytes derived extracellular vesicles ,Exosomes ,Biomarker ,Primary progressive ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Activation of the purinergic receptor P2X7 (P2X7R) is believed to be deleterious in autoimmune diseases and it was hypothesized to play a role in the pathogenesis of MS. P2X7R is an ATP-gated non-selective cationic channel; its activation can be driven by high concentrations of ATP and leads to the generation of large, cytolytic conductance pores. P2X7R activation can also result in apoptosis as a consequence of the activation of the caspase cascade via P2X7R-dependent stimulation of the NLRP3 inflammasome. We measured P2X7R in oligodendrocyte derived extracellular vesicles (ODEVs) in MS patients and in healthy subjects.Sixty-eight MS patients (50 relapsing-remitting, RR-MS, 18 primary progressive, PP-MS) and 57 healthy controls (HC) were enrolled. ODEVs were enriched from serum by a double step immunoaffinity method using an anti OMGp (oligodendrocyte myelin glycoprotein) antibody. P2X7R concentration was measured in ODEVs lysates by ELISA.One–way Anova test showed that P2X7R in ODEVs is significantly higher in PP-MS (mean: 1742.89 pg/mL) compared both to RR-MS (mean: 1277.33 pg/mL) (p
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- 2024
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3. Long-term effectiveness of natalizumab in secondary progressive multiple sclerosis: A propensity-matched study
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Clara G. Chisari, Umberto Aguglia, Maria Pia Amato, Roberto Bergamaschi, Antonio Bertolotto, Simona Bonavita, Vincenzo Brescia Morra, Paola Cavalla, Eleonora Cocco, Antonella Conte, Salvatore Cottone, Giovanna De Luca, Alessia Di Sapio, Massimo Filippi, Antonio Gallo, Claudio Gasperini, Franco Granella, Giacomo Lus, Davide Maimone, Giorgia Teresa Maniscalco, Girolama Marfia, Lucia Moiola, Damiano Paolicelli, Ilaria Pesci, Paolo Ragonese, Marco Rovaris, Giuseppe Salemi, Claudio Solaro, Rocco Totaro, Maria Trojano, Marika Vianello, Mauro Zaffaroni, Vito Lepore, Francesco Patti, Carlo Avolio, Roberto Balgera, Paola Banfi, Paolo Bellantonio, Placido Bramanti, Lorenzo Capone, Guido Cavalletti, Luca Chiveri, Raffaella Clerici, Marinella Clerico, Francesco Corea, Vincenzo Dattola, Francesca De Robertis, Giancarlo Di Battista, Simonetta Galgani, Maurizia Gatto, Maria Grazia Grasso, Matilde Inglese, Lorenzo Lo Russo, Francesco Ottavio Logullo, Renato Mantegazza, Alessandra Protti, Monica Rezzonico, Mariarosa Rottoli, Marco Salvetti, Elio Scarpini, Leonardo Sinisi, Maddalena Sparaco, Daniele Spitaleri, Tiziana Tassinari, Simone Tonietti, Paola Valentino, Franco Valzania, and Simonetta Venturi
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Natalizumab ,Interferon beta 1b ,Secondary progressive multiple sclerosis ,Disability progression ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Treatment options for secondary progressive MS (SPMS) are limited, especially considering that the new drugs recently approved are licensed for actively relapsing patients. We aimed to compare the disability progression in a real-world cohort of SPMS patients treated with natalizumab (NTZ) or interferon beta-1b (IFNb-1b). This multicenter retrospective enrolled patients with a diagnosis of SPMS according to 2014 Lublin criteria, who received NTZ or IFNb-1b for at least 48 months between the 1st June 2012 and the 15th May 2018 at 33 Italian MS centers contributing to the Italian MS Registry NTZ or IFNb-1b. Confirmed Expanded Disability Status Scale worsening (CEW) and progression independent of relapse (PIRA) were evaluated. In order to correct for non-randomization, a propensity score matching of the groups was performed. Out of 5206 MS patients identified at the time of data extraction, 421 SPMS patients treated with NTZ (224 [53.2%] females, mean age 45.3 ± 25.4 years) and 353 with IFNb-1b (133 [37.8%] females, mean age 48.5 ± 19.8 years) were enrolled. After applying the matching procedure, 102 patients were retained in the NTZ group and 98 in the IFNb-2b group. The proportion of patients who reached the 48-month 1-point CEW was significantly higher in IFNb-1b compared to NTZ group (58.2% versus 30.4%, p = 0.01). The proportion of patients who developed PIRA at 48 months were significantly higher in IFNb-1b compared to NTZ (72.4% versus 40.2%, p = 0.01). EDSS before treatment initiation and SPMS duration were risk factors for disability progression in terms of PIRA (HR 2.54, 25%CI 1.67–5.7; p = 0.006 and HR 2.04, 25%CI 1.22–3.35; p = 0.01, respectively). Patients treated with IFNb-1b were 1.64 times more to likely to develop PIRA (HR 1.64, 25%CI 1.04–4.87; p = 0.001). Treatment with NTZ in SPMS patients showed more favorable disability outcomes compared to IFNb-1b with beneficial effects over 48 months.
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- 2024
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4. EBV and multiple sclerosis: expression of LMP2A in MS patients
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Simone Agostini, Roberta Mancuso, Domenico Caputo, Marco Rovaris, and Mario Clerici
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multiple sclerosis ,Epstein–Barr virus ,EBNA-1 ,LMP2A ,antibodies ,mRNA ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Several evidences, including increased serum titers of Epstein–Barr virus (EBV)-specific antibodies and the presence of EBV DNA in brain of patients suggest a possible role of this virus in the pathogenesis of Multiple Sclerosis (MS), a chronic neurodegenerative disease with an unknown etiopathology. Aim of the present study is to verify if the expression of LMP2A and EBNA-1, two EBV genes, is altered in MS patients. EBV viral load, LMP2A and EBNA-1 gene expression and EBNA-1 antibodies titers were evaluated in blood of EBV-seropositive MS patients (n = 57; 31 relapsing remitting –RRMS- and 26 progressive -PMS-patients) and age- and sex-matched healthy controls (HC, n = 49). Results showed that EBNA-1 and VCA antibodies titers are significantly augmented in MS patients compared to HC (p
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- 2024
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5. Telerehabilitation for Lee Silverman Voice Treatment (Tele-LSVT)-Loud on voice intensity and voice use in daily living in people with multiple sclerosis: A protocol for a feasibility and pilot randomized controlled study
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Chiara Vitali, Giulia Fusari, Cinzia Baldanzi, Diego Michael Cacciatore, Valeria Crispiatico, Alessio Carullo, Marco Rovaris, Davide Cattaneo, Francesca Baglio, and Sara Isernia
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Objective Alterations in voice intensity and quality may constitute a social life limitation in people with multiple sclerosis (MS), but only 2% of cases receive speech therapy. Especially the Lee Silverman Voice Treatment (LSVT)-Loud is a highly effective intensive method for voice intensity, requiring subjects’ repeated attendance at the clinic. Telerehabilitation may represent a feasible solution to bypass potential barriers related to speech therapy attendance, scaling up the beneficial effects of the treatment to a broader population. The proposed protocol aims to test the feasibility and the pilot efficacy of the LSVT-Loud delivered in telerehabilitation (Tele-LSVT-Loud), compared to the same treatment delivered in the clinic (LSVT-Loud). Methods A single-blinded, parallel, two-arm, pilot randomized (1:1 ratio) controlled trial will be performed involving 20 people with MS. Patients will be allocated to 4 weeks of Tele-LSVT-Loud by accessing a telerehabilitation platform at home or LSVT-Loud conventionally delivered in the clinic. Feasibility and pilot effectiveness will be evaluated three times: before (T0), after the treatment (T1), and 3-month follow-up (T2). Feasibility measures will include adherence, adverse events, user experience, motivation, engagement, and acceptability. Vocal intensity during a 1-minute monologue will be the primary outcome measure. Secondary outcome measures will be the vocal quality during a 1-minute monologue, sustained /a/ voice intensity, quality and stability, voice use in daily life, voice subjective perception in daily life, and quality of life. Results Expected results will be (1) high feasibility of Tele-LSVT-Loud and (2) a non-inferiority effect of Tele-LSVT-Loud compared with face-to-face treatment delivery on voice intensity and quality outcomes. Conclusions Tele-LSVT-Loud may be a feasible intervention for MS alteration in voice intensity and quality with a non-inferior effect compared to LSVT-Loud.
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- 2023
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6. An Internet- and Kinect-Based Multiple Sclerosis Fitness Intervention Training With Pilates Exercises: Development and Usability Study
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Andrea Tacchino, Michela Ponzio, Paolo Confalonieri, Letizia Leocani, Matilde Inglese, Diego Centonze, Eleonora Cocco, Paolo Gallo, Damiano Paolicelli, Marco Rovaris, Loredana Sabattini, Gioacchino Tedeschi, Luca Prosperini, Francesco Patti, Placido Bramanti, Elisabetta Pedrazzoli, Mario Alberto Battaglia, and Giampaolo Brichetto
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Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundBalance impairments are common in people with multiple sclerosis (MS), with reduced ability to maintain position and delayed responses to postural adjustments. Pilates is a popular alternative method for balance training that may reduce the rapid worsening of symptoms and the increased risk of secondary conditions (eg, depression) that are frequently associated with physical inactivity. ObjectiveIn this paper, we aimed to describe the design, development, and usability testing of MS Fitness Intervention Training (MS-FIT), a Kinect-based tool implementing Pilates exercises customized for MS. MethodsMS-FIT has been developed using a user-centered design approach (design, prototype, user feedback, and analysis) to gain the target user’s perspective. A team composed of 1 physical therapist, 2 game programmers, and 1 game designer developed the first version of MS-FIT that integrated the knowledge and experience of the team with MS literature findings related to Pilates exercises and balance interventions based on exergames. MS-FIT, developed by using the Unity 3D (Unity Technologies) game engine software with Kinect Sensor V2 for Windows, implements exercises for breathing, posture, and balance. Feedback from an Italian panel of experts in MS rehabilitation (neurologists, physiatrists, physical therapists, 1 statistician, and 1 bioengineer) and people with MS was collected to customize the tool for use in MS. The context of MS-FIT is traveling around the world to visit some of the most important cities to learn the aspects of their culture through pictures and stories. At each stay of the travel, the avatar of a Pilates teacher shows the user the exercises to be performed. Overall, 9 people with MS (n=4, 44% women; mean age 42.89, SD 11.97 years; mean disease duration 10.19, SD 9.18 years; Expanded Disability Status Scale score 3.17, SD 0.75) were involved in 3 outpatient user test sessions of 30 minutes; MS-FIT’s usability was assessed through an ad hoc questionnaire (maximum value=5; higher the score, higher the usability) evaluating easiness to use, playability, enjoyment, satisfaction, and acceptance. ResultsA user-centered design approach was used to develop an accessible and challenging tool for balance training. All people with MS (9/9, 100%) completed the user test sessions and answered the ad hoc questionnaire. The average score on each item ranged from 3.78 (SD 0.67) to 4.33 (SD 1.00), which indicated a high usability level. The feedback and suggestions provided by 64% (9/14) of people with MS and 36% (5/14) of therapists involved in the user test were implemented to refine the first prototype to release MS-FIT 2.0. ConclusionsThe participants reported that MS-FIT was a usable tool. It is a promising system for enhancing the motivation and engagement of people with MS in performing exercise with the aim of improving their physical status.
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- 2023
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7. A cultural training for the improvement of cognitive and affective Theory of Mind in people with Multiple Sclerosis: a pilot randomized controlled study
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Alessia d’Arma, Annalisa Valle, Davide Massaro, Gisella Baglio, Sara Isernia, Sonia Di Tella, Marco Rovaris, Francesca Baglio, and Antonella Marchetti
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Multiple Sclerosis ,rehabilitation ,rehabilitation training ,ToM ,social cognition ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Theory of Mind (ToM), the ability to understand and attribute mental states to ourselves and others, could be impaired in Multiple Sclerosis (MS), a neurodegenerative disease affecting young adults. Considering that ToM is strictly connected to Quality of Life (QoL) in MS and that could enhance the social support network -which is particularly important for this population-, we aimed to design and implement a novel ToM rehabilitation training. To make the training as much ecological as possible, we have devised a protocol enhancing ToM through stimuli depicting real-world conditions (video-clips taken from cinema movies, literary fictions, and audio voices). We test training’s effect on both cognitive and affective components of ToM in a sample of 13 subjects, randomly assigned to the ToM training Group and to the Control Group. The following ToM tasks were administered: the Reading the Mind in the Eyes (RMET), the Strange Stories task, the Faux Pas Task and the False Belief First- and Second - Order Task (FB II and III order). We also administered a psycho-behavioral assessment through the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20). Results show that our novel ToM training is useful in enhancing ToM abilities measured by the following tasks: the RMET (affective task, p = 0.015) and the FB II-order task (FB, cognitive task, p = 0.032). Our ToM training had also a significant effect on the total score of the TAS-20 Scale (p = 0.018) and on its “Difficulty Describing Feelings subscale” (p = 0.018), indicating a reduction of the alexithymia traits. Future works with larger samples could investigate the ToM training effectiveness in a more representative MS populations.
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- 2023
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8. The impact of PM2.5, PM10 and NO2 on Covid-19 severity in a sample of patients with multiple sclerosis: A case-control study
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Gianmarco, Abbadessa, Umberto, Aguglia, Lia, Allegorico, Maria, Allegri Rossi Beatrice, Anastasia, Alteno, Pia, Amato Maria, Pietro, Annovazzi, Carlo, Antozzi, Lucia, Appendino, Sebastiano, Arena, Viola, Baione, Roberto, Balgera, Valeria, Barcella, Damiano, Baroncini, Caterina, Barrilà, Mario A, Battaglia, Alessandra, Bellacosa, Gianmarco, Bellucci, Roberto, Bergamaschi, Valeria, Bergamaschi, Daiana, Bezzini, Beatrice, Biolzi, Alvino, Bisecco, Simona, Bonavita, Giovanna, Borriello, Chiara, Bosa, Antonio, Bosco, Francesca, Bovis, Marco, Bozzali, Laura, Brambilla, Vincenzo, Brescia Morra, Giampaolo, Brichetto, Maria, Buccafusca, Elisabetta, Bucciantini, Sebastiano, Bucello, Chiara, Buscarinu Maria, Paola, Cabboi Maria, Massimiliano, Calabrese, Francesca, Calabria, Francesca, Caleri, Federico, Camilli, Maria, Caniatti Luisa, Roberto, Cantello, Marco, Capobianco, Ruggero, Capra, Rocco, Capuano, Luca, Carmisciano, Patrizia, Carta, Paola, Cavalla, Grazia, Celani Maria, Maria, Cellerino, Raffaella, Cerqua, Clara, Chisari, Raffaella, Clerici, Marinella, Clerico, Eleonora, Cocco, Gaia, Cola, Giancarlo, Comi, Paolo, Confalonieri, Antonella, Conte, Zaffira, Conti Marta, Christian, Cordano, Susanna, Cordera, Cinzia, Cordioli, Francesco, Corea, Claudio, Correale, Salvatore, Cottone, Francesco, Crescenzo, Erica, Curti, Alessandro, d'Ambrosio, Emanuele, D'Amico, Chiara, Danni Maura, Alessia, d'Arma, Vincenzo, Dattola, Stefano, de Biase, Giovanna, De Luca, Federica, De Mercanti Stefania, Paolo, De Mitri, Nicola, De Rossi, Nicola, De Stefano, Maria, Della Cava Fabio, Marco, Della Cava, Sonia, Di Lemme, Mario, di Napoli, Alessia, Di Sapio, Renato, Docimo, Anna, Dutto, Luana, Evangelista, Salvatore, Fanara, Roberta, Fantozzi, Diana, Ferraro, Teresa, Ferrò Maria, Massimo, Filippi, Cristina, Fioretti, Mario, Fratta, Jessica, Frau, Marzia, Fronza, Roberto, Furlan, Alberto, Gajofatto, Antonio, Gallo, Paolo, Gallo, Claudio, Gasperini, Anna, Ghazaryan, Bruno, Giometto, Francesca, Gobbin, Flora, Govone, Franco, Granella, Erica, Grange, Grazia, Grasso Maria, Luigi ME, Grimaldi, Angelica, Guareschi, Clara, Guaschino, Simone, Guerrieri, Donata, Guidetti, Barbara, Juergenson Ina, Pietro, Iaffaldano, Antonio, Ianniello, Luigi, Iasevoli, Paolo, Immovilli, Daniele, Imperiale, Teresa, Infante Maria, Matilde, Inglese, Rosa, Iodice, Aniello, Iovino, Giovanna, Konrad, Doriana, Landi, Roberta, Lanzillo, Caterina, Lapucci, Luigi, Lavorgna, Rita, L'Episcopo Maria, Serena, Leva, Giuseppe, Liberatore, Marianna, Lo Re, Marco, Longoni, Leonardo, Lopiano, Lorena, Lorefice, Matteo, Lucchini, Giacomo, Lus, Davide, Maimone, Maria, Malentacchi, Giulia, Mallucci, Simona, Malucchi, Rosa, Mancinelli Chiara, Luca, Mancinelli, Paolo, Manganotti, Teresa, Maniscalco Giorgia, Vittorio, Mantero, Sabrina, Marangoni, Damiano, Marastoni, Alessandra, Marfia Girolama, Fabiana, Marinelli, Alessandro, Marti, Filippo, Martinelli Boneschi, Federco, Masserano Zoli, Francesca, Matta, Laura, Mendozzi, Giuseppe, Meucci, Silvia, Miante, Giuseppina, Miele, Eva, Milano, Massimiliano, Mirabella, Rosanna, Missione, Marcello, Moccia, Lucia, Moiola, Sara, Montepietra, Margherita, MontiBragadin, Federico, Montini, Roberta, Motta, Raffaele, Nardone, Gabri, Nicoletti Carolina, Eduardo, Nobile-Orazio, Agostino, Nozzolillo, Marco, Onofrj, Riccardo, Orlandi, Anna, Palmieri, Damiano, Paolicelli, Livia, Pasquali, Fulvio, Pasquin, Luisa, Pastò, Francesco, Patti, Elisabetta, Pedrazzoli, Paola, Perini, Ilaria, Pesci, Maria, Petracca, Alfredo, Petrone, Carlo, Piantadosi, Anna M, Pietroboni, Federica, Pinardi, Marta, Ponzano, Emilio, Portaccio, Mattia, Pozzato, Carlo, Pozzilli, Luca, Prosperini, Alessandra, Protti, Eugenio, Pucci, Marta, Radaelli, Paolo, Ragonese, Sarah, Rasia, Sabrina, Realmuto, Anna, Repice, Eleonora, Rigoni, Teresa, Rilla Maria, Francesca, Rinaldi, Marcello, Romano Calogero, Marco, Ronzoni, Marco, Rovaris, Francesca, Ruscica, Loredana, Sabattini, Giuseppe, Salemi, Marco, Salvetti, Lorenzo, Saraceno, Alessia, Sartori, Arianna, Sartori, Elvira, Sbragia, Cinzia, Scandellari, Ilaria, Scarano Giuditta, Valentina, Scarano, Irene, Schiavetti, Maria, Sessa, Caterina, Sgarito, Grazia, Sibilia, Gabriele, Siciliano, Alessio, Signori, Elisabetta, Signoriello, Leonardo, Sinisi, Francesca, Sireci, Patrizia, Sola, Claudio, Solaro, Pia, Sormani Maria, Stefano, Sotgiu, Maddalena, Sparaco, Laura, Stromillo Maria, Silvia, Strumia, Laura, Susani Emanuela, Giulietta, Tabiadon, Francesco, Teatini, Gioacchino, Tedeschi, Valentina, Tomassini, Simone, Tonietti, Valentina, Torri Clerici, Carla, Tortorella, Simona, Toscano, Rocco, Totaro, Maria, Trojano, Maria, Trotta, Gabriella, Turano, Monica, Ulivelli, Manzo, Valentino, Giovanna, Vaula, Domizia, Vecchio, Marco, Vercellino, Pinuccia, Verrengia Elena, Marika, Vianello, Eleonora, Virgilio, Francesca, Vitetta, Stefano, Vollaro, Mauro, Zaffaroni, Mauro, Zampolini, Roberto, Zarbo Ignazio, Antonio, Zito, Luigi, Zuliani, Ponzano, Marta, Schiavetti, Irene, Bergamaschi, Roberto, Pisoni, Enrico, Bellavia, Andrea, Mallucci, Giulia, Carmisciano, Luca, Inglese, Matilde, Cordioli, Cinzia, Marfia, Girolama Alessandra, Cocco, Eleonora, Immovilli, Paolo, Pesci, Ilaria, Scandellari, Cinzia, Cavalla, Paola, Radaelli, Marta, Vianello, Marika, Vitetta, Francesca, Montepietra, Sara, Amato, Maria Pia, Fioretti, Cristina, Filippi, Massimo, Sartori, Arianna, Caleri, Francesca, Clerico, Marinella, Gallo, Antonio, Conte, Antonella, Clerici, Raffaella, De Luca, Giovanna, Boneschi, Filippo Martinelli, Cantello, Roberto, Calabrese, Massimiliano, Tortorella, Carla, Rovaris, Marco, Verrengia, Elena Pinuccia, Patti, Francesco, Morra, Vincenzo Brescia, Salvetti, Marco, and Sormani, Maria Pia
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- 2022
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9. Uncovering Subtle Gait Deterioration in People with Early-Stage Multiple Sclerosis Using Inertial Sensors: A 2-Year Multicenter Longitudinal Study
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Elisa Gervasoni, Denise Anastasi, Rachele Di Giovanni, Claudio Solaro, Marco Rovaris, Giampaolo Brichetto, Paolo Confalonieri, Andrea Tacchino, Ilaria Carpinella, and Davide Cattaneo
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gait quality ,instrumented gait assessment ,rehabilitation ,multiple sclerosis ,wearable sensors ,Chemical technology ,TP1-1185 - Abstract
Limited longitudinal studies have been conducted on gait impairment progression overtime in non-disabled people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS). Therefore, a deeper understanding of gait changes with the progression of the disease is essential. The objective of the present study was to describe changes in gait quality in PwMS with a disease duration ≤ 5 years, and to verify whether a change in gait quality is associated with a change in disability and perception of gait deterioration. We conducted a multicenter prospective cohort study. Fifty-six subjects were assessed at baseline (age: 38.2 ± 10.7 years, Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS): 1.5 ± 0.7 points) and after 2 years, participants performed the six-minute walk test (6MWT) wearing inertial sensors. Quality of gait (regularity, symmetry, and instability), disability (EDSS), and walking perception (multiple sclerosis walking scale-12, MSWS-12) were collected. We found no differences on EDSS, 6MWT, and MSWS-12 between baseline and follow-up. A statistically significant correlation between increased EDSS scores and increased gait instability was found in the antero-posterior (AP) direction (r = 0.34, p = 0.01). Seventeen subjects (30%) deteriorated (increase of at least 0.5 point at EDSS) over 2 years. A multivariate analysis on deteriorated PwMS showed that changes in gait instability medio-lateral (ML) and stride regularity, and changes in ML gait symmetry were significantly associated with changes in EDSS (F = 7.80 (3,13), p = 0.003, R2 = 0.56). Moreover, gait changes were associated with a decrease in PwMS perception on stability (p < 0.05). Instrumented assessment can detect subtle changes in gait stability, regularity, and symmetry not revealed during EDSS neurological assessment. Moreover, instrumented changes in gait quality impact on subjects’ perception of gait during activities of daily living.
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- 2023
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10. Vitamin D Receptor Gene Polymorphism Predicts the Outcome of Multidisciplinary Rehabilitation in Multiple Sclerosis Patients
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Franca Rosa Guerini, Cristina Agliardi, Letizia Oreni, Elisabetta Groppo, Elisabetta Bolognesi, Milena Zanzottera, Domenico Caputo, Marco Rovaris, and Mario Clerici
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multiple sclerosis ,vitamin D receptor SNPs ,multidisciplinary rehabilitation ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Better knowledge about the possible role of genetic factors in modulating the response to multiple sclerosis (MS) treatment, including rehabilitation, known to promote neural plasticity, could improve the standard of care for this disease. Vitamin D receptor (VDR) gene polymorphisms are associated with MS risk, probably because of the role played by vitamin D in regulating inflammatory and reparative processes. The aim of this study was to evaluate the association of the most important functional VDR SNPs (TaqI (T/C), ApaI (A/C), and FokI (C/T)) with functional outcome in MS patients undergoing multidisciplinary inpatient rehabilitation (MDR) treatment, in order to determine whether genetic profiling might be useful to identify subjects with a higher chance of recovery. To this end, 249 MS inpatients with a diagnosis of either progressive (pMS; n = 155) or relapsing remitting (RRMS; n = 94) disease who underwent MDR treatment (average duration = 5.1 weeks) were genotyped for VDR SNPs by real-time allelic discrimination. The rehabilitation outcome was assessed using the modified Barthel Index (mBI), Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS), and pain numerical rating scores (NRS) at the beginning and the end of MDR treatment. A positive correlation was observed in RRMS patients between the VDR TaqI major allele (TT) and mBI increase (i.e., better functional recovery), as assessed by the linear and logistic regression analysis adjusted for gender, age, disease duration, time of hospitalization, HLA-DRB1*15.01 positivity, and number of rehabilitative interventions (Beta = 6.35; p = 0.0002). The VDR-1 TaqI, ApaI, FokI: TCC haplotype was also associated with mBI increase in RRMS patients (Beta = 3.24; p = 0.007), whereas the VDR-2: CAC haplotype was correlated with a lower mBI increase (Beta = −2.18 p = 0.04) compared with the other haplotypes. VDR TaqI major allele (TT), as well as the VDR-1 TaqI, ApaI, FokI: TCC haplotype could be associated with a better rehabilitation outcome in RRMS patients.
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- 2023
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11. Acute Thermoregulatory and Cardiovascular Response to Submaximal Exercise in People With Multiple Sclerosis
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Elisa Gervasoni, Rita Bertoni, Denise Anastasi, Claudio Solaro, Rachele Di Giovanni, Erica Grange, Hanns-Christian Gunga, Marco Rovaris, Davide Cattaneo, Martina Anna Maggioni, and Giampiero Merati
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core body temperature ,6-minute Walk Test (6MWT) ,heart rate ,multiple sclerosis ,thermoregulation ,rehabilitation ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
BackgroundHeat sensitivity occurs in a high percentage of people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS), in response to environmental or exercise-induced increase in body temperature. However, the kinetic and magnitude of adaptation of the internal load and of the core body temperature (CBT) to a submaximal continuous exercise has been poorly addressed in PwMS; this may be relevant for the brief exercise bouts usually occurring in normal daily life. The aim of this work was to evaluate whether multiple sclerosis influences the acute adaptation of the internal load, the CBT and the perceptual load in response to a constant submaximal work step.MethodsCBT has been continuously monitored (0.5 Hz) by a validated wearable heat-flux sensor and electrocardiography was recorded (250 Hz) by a wearable device during a standard 6-minute walk test (6MWT) in 14 PwMS (EDSS, 4.7 ± 1.2; disease duration: 13.0 ± 10.2 years; m ± SD) and 14 age, sex and BMI-matched healthy subjects (HS). The rate of perceived exertion (RPE) of the lower limbs was assessed during the 6MWT by the Borg scale (6-20).ResultsAs expected, PwMS walked a significantly shorter distance (361 ± 98 m) than the HS group (613 ± 62 m, p
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- 2022
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12. Simultaneous quantification of natural and inducible regulatory T-cell subsets during interferon-β therapy of multiple sclerosis patients
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Marco Chiarini, Ruggero Capra, Federico Serana, Diego Bertoli, Alessandra Sottini, Viviana Giustini, Cristina Scarpazza, Marco Rovaris, Valentina Torri Clerici, Diana Ferraro, Simonetta Galgani, Claudio Solaro, Marta Zaffira Conti, Andrea Visconti, Luisa Imberti, and SURROGATE Study Group
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Multiple sclerosis ,Interferon-β ,Regulatory T cells ,Treg subsets ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background The mechanisms underlying the therapeutic activity of interferon-β in multiple sclerosis are still not completely understood. In the present study, we evaluated the short and long-term effects of interferon-β treatment on different subsets of regulatory T cells in relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis patients biologically responsive to treatment because of mixovirus resistance protein A inducibility. Methods In this prospective longitudinal study, subsets of natural regulatory T cells (naïve, central memory and effector memory) and inducible regulatory T cells (Tr1), as well as in vitro-induced regulatory T cells (Tr1-like cells), were simultaneously quantified by flow cytometry in samples prepared from 148 therapy-naïve multiple sclerosis patients obtained before and after 6, 12, 18, and 24 months of interferon-β-1a treatment. mRNA for interleukin-10 and Tr1-related genes (CD18, CD49b, and CD46, together with Cyt-1 and Cyt-2 CD46-associated isoforms) were quantified in Tr1-like cells. Results Despite profound inter-individual variations in the modulation of all regulatory T-cell subsets, the percentage of natural regulatory T cells increased after 6, 12, and 24 months of interferon-β treatment. This increase was characterized by the expansion of central and effector memory regulatory T-cell subsets. The percentage of Tr1 significantly enhanced at 12 months of therapy and continued to be high at the subsequent evaluation points. Patients experiencing relapses displayed a higher percentage of naïve regulatory T cells and a lower percentage of central memory regulatory T cells and of Tr1 before starting interferon-β therapy. In addition, an increase over time of central memory and of Tr1 was observed only in patients with stable disease. However, in vitro-induced Tr1-like cells, prepared from patients treated for 24 months, produced less amount of interleukin-10 mRNA compared with pre-treatment Tr1-like cells. Conclusion Interferon-β induces the expansion of T regulatory subsets endowed with a high suppressive activity, especially in clinically stable patients. The overall concurrent modulation of natural and inducible regulatory T-cell subsets might explain the therapeutic effects of interferon-β in multiple sclerosis patients.
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- 2020
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13. Walking With Horizontal Head Turns Is Impaired in Persons With Early-Stage Multiple Sclerosis Showing Normal Locomotion
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Ilaria Carpinella, Elisa Gervasoni, Denise Anastasi, Rachele Di Giovanni, Andrea Tacchino, Giampaolo Brichetto, Paolo Confalonieri, Claudio Solaro, Marco Rovaris, Maurizio Ferrarin, and Davide Cattaneo
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multiple sclerosis ,wearable inertial sensors ,instrumented assessment ,dynamic balance ,rehabilitation outcome assessment ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
BackgroundTurning the head while walking (an action often required during daily living) is particularly challenging to maintain balance. It can therefore potentially reveal subtle impairments in early-stage people with multiple sclerosis who still show normal locomotion (NW-PwMS). This would help in identifying those subjects who can benefit from early preventive exercise aimed at slowing the MS-related functional decline.ObjectivesTo analyze if the assessment of walking with horizontal head turns (WHHT) through inertial sensors can discriminate between healthy subjects (HS) and NW-PwMS and between NW-PwMS subgroups. To assess if the discriminant ability of the instrumented WHHT is higher compared to clinical scores. To assess the concurrent validity of the sensor-based metrics.MethodsIn this multicenter study, 40 HS and 59 NW-PwMS [Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) ≤ 2.5, disease duration ≤ 5 years] were tested. Participants executed Item-6 of the Fullerton Advanced Balance scale-short (FAB-s) wearing three inertial sensors on the trunk and ankles. The item required to horizontally turn the head at a beat of the metronome (100 bpm) while walking. Signals of the sensors were processed to compute spatiotemporal, regularity, symmetry, dynamic stability, and trunk sway metrics descriptive of WHHT.ResultsMediolateral regularity, anteroposterior symmetry, and mediolateral stability were reduced in NW-PwMS vs. HS (p ≤ 0.001), and showed moderate discriminant ability (area under the receiver operator characteristic curve [AUC]: 0.71–0.73). AP symmetry and ML stability were reduced (p ≤ 0.026) in EDSS: 2–2.5 vs. EDSS: 0–1.5 subgroup (AUC: 0.69–0.70). The number of NW-PwMS showing at least one abnormal instrumented metric (68%) was larger (p ≤ 0.002) than the number of participants showing abnormal FAB-s-Item6 (32%) and FAB-s clinical scores (39%). EDSS: 2–2.5 subgroup included more individuals showing abnormal instrumented metrics (86%) compared to EDSS: 0–1.5 subgroup (57%). The instrumented metrics significantly correlated with FAB-s-Item6 and FAB-s scores (|Spearman's rs| ≥ 0.37, p < 0.001), thus demonstrating their concurrent validity.ConclusionThe instrumented assessment of WHHT provided valid objective metrics that discriminated, with higher sensitivity than clinical scores, between HS and NW-PwMS and between EDSS subgroups. The method is a promising tool to complement clinical evaluation, and reveal subclinical impairments in persons who can benefit from early preventive rehabilitative interventions.
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- 2022
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14. Myelin Basic Protein in Oligodendrocyte-Derived Extracellular Vesicles as a Diagnostic and Prognostic Biomarker in Multiple Sclerosis: A Pilot Study
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Cristina Agliardi, Franca Rosa Guerini, Milena Zanzottera, Elisabetta Bolognesi, Silvia Picciolini, Domenico Caputo, Marco Rovaris, Maria Barbara Pasanisi, and Mario Clerici
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multiple sclerosis ,primary progressive multiple sclerosis ,extracellular vesicles ,exosomes ,oligodendrocytes ,MOG ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Approximately 15% of multiple sclerosis (MS) patients develop a progressive form of disease from onset; this condition (primary progressive-PP) MS is difficult to diagnose and treat, and is associated with a poor prognosis. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) of brain origin isolated from blood and their protein cargoes could function as a biomarker of pathological conditions. We verified whether MBP and MOG content in oligodendrocytes-derived EVs (ODEVs) could be biomarkers of MS and could help in the differential diagnosis of clinical MS phenotypes. A total of 136 individuals (7 clinically isolated syndrome (CIS), 18 PPMS, 49 relapsing remitting (RRMS)) and 70 matched healthy controls (HC) were enrolled. ODEVs were enriched from serum by immune-capture with anti-MOG antibody; MBP and MOG protein cargoes were measured by ELISA. MBP concentration in ODEVs was significantly increased in CIS (p < 0.001), RRMS (p < 0.001) and PPMS (p < 0.001) compared to HC and was correlated with disease severity measured by EDSS and MSSS. Notably, MBP concentration in ODEVs was also significantly augmented in PPMS compared to RRMS (p = 0.004) and CIS (p = 0.03). Logistic regression and ROC analyses confirmed these results. A minimally invasive blood test measuring the concentration of MBP in ODEVs is a promising tool that could facilitate MS diagnosis.
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- 2023
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15. Two Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms in the Purinergic Receptor P2X7 Gene Are Associated with Disease Severity in Multiple Sclerosis
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Franca Rosa Guerini, Cristina Agliardi, Elisabetta Bolognesi, Milena Zanzottera, Domenico Caputo, Maria Barbara Pasanisi, Marco Rovaris, and Mario Clerici
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multiple sclerosis ,multiple sclerosis severity score ,purinergic receptor ,P2X7 receptor polymorphisms ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic autoimmune inflammatory disease of the central nervous system (CNS) that leads to progressive physical disability. Recent evidence has suggested that P2X7 receptor (P2X7R)-mediated purinergic signalling pathways play a role in MS-associated neuroinflammation, possibly contributing to disease pathogenesis. To evaluate possible associations between P2X7R polymorphisms and MS disease severity, we performed an association study of five non-synonymous SNPs coding variants of the P2X7R gene: rs1718119 Ala348Thr, rs2230911 Thr357Ser, rs2230912 Gln460Arg, rs3751143 Glu496Ala, and rs28360457 Arg307Gln, modulating P2X7R expression in 128 MS patients (relapsing remitting MS, RRMS: n = 94; secondary progressive, SPMS: n = 34). All patients were genotyped, and multiple sclerosis severity score (MSSS) was evaluated in every case; 189 healthy subjects were enrolled as well as controls. Results showed that P2X7R rs1718119(A) 348Thr and rs22390912(G) 464Arg, two SNPs of minor allele frequency (MAF) known to confer gain of function to the P2X7R protein, were associated with significantly higher MSSS in RRMS patients alone (SMRR (p < 0.001, p = 0.01, respectively)). Interestingly, two whole haplotypes resulted in having significant association with MSSS in these same patients. Thus: (1) the P2X7R-4 “ACGAG” haplotype, characterized by the co-presence of the rs1718119-rs2230912 AG MAF alleles, was associated with higher MSSS (Beta: 1.11 p = 0.04), and (2) the P2X7R-1 “GCAAG” complementary haplotype, which contains the rs1718119 and rs2230912 GA wild-type alleles, was more frequently carried by patients with lower MSSS and less severe disease (Beta: −1.54 p < 0.001). Although being preliminary and needing confirmation in an ampler cohort, these results suggest that 348Thr and 464Arg variants have a role as modulators of disease severity in RRMS patients.
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- 2022
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16. Balance Impairments in People with Early-Stage Multiple Sclerosis: Boosting the Integration of Instrumented Assessment in Clinical Practice
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Ilaria Carpinella, Denise Anastasi, Elisa Gervasoni, Rachele Di Giovanni, Andrea Tacchino, Giampaolo Brichetto, Paolo Confalonieri, Marco Rovaris, Claudio Solaro, Maurizio Ferrarin, and Davide Cattaneo
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multiple sclerosis ,balance ,inertial sensor ,early assessment ,preventive rehabilitation ,Chemical technology ,TP1-1185 - Abstract
The balance of people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS) is commonly assessed during neurological examinations through clinical Romberg and tandem gait tests that are often not sensitive enough to unravel subtle deficits in early-stage PwMS. Inertial sensors (IMUs) could overcome this drawback. Nevertheless, IMUs are not yet fully integrated into clinical practice due to issues including the difficulty to understand/interpret the big number of parameters provided and the lack of cut-off values to identify possible abnormalities. In an attempt to overcome these limitations, an instrumented modified Romberg test (ImRomberg: standing on foam with eyes closed while wearing an IMU on the trunk) was administered to 81 early-stage PwMS and 38 healthy subjects (HS). To facilitate clinical interpretation, 21 IMU-based parameters were computed and reduced through principal component analysis into two components, sway complexity and sway intensity, descriptive of independent aspects of balance, presenting a clear clinical meaning and significant correlations with at least one clinical scale. Compared to HS, early-stage PwMS showed a 228% reduction in sway complexity and a 63% increase in sway intensity, indicating, respectively, a less automatic (more conscious) balance control and larger and faster trunk movements during upright posture. Cut-off values were derived to identify the presence of balance abnormalities and if these abnormalities are clinically meaningful. By applying these thresholds and integrating the ImRomberg test with the clinical tandem gait test, balance impairments were identified in 58% of PwMS versus the 17% detected by traditional Romberg and tandem gait tests. The higher sensitivity of the proposed approach would allow for the direct identification of early-stage PwMS who could benefit from preventive rehabilitation interventions aimed at slowing MS-related functional decline during neurological examinations and with minimal modifications to the tests commonly performed.
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- 2022
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17. Neuroplasticity and Motor Rehabilitation in Multiple Sclerosis: A Systematic Review on MRI Markers of Functional and Structural Changes
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Eleonora Tavazzi, Marta Cazzoli, Alice Pirastru, Valeria Blasi, Marco Rovaris, Niels Bergsland, and Francesca Baglio
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multiple sclerosis ,rehabilitation ,neuroplastic changes ,DTI (diffusion tensor imaging) ,fMRI ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Background: Motor rehabilitation is routinely used in clinical practice as an effective method to reduce progressive disability gain in multiple sclerosis (MS), but rehabilitation approaches are typically unstandardized, and only few studies have investigated the impact of rehabilitation on brain neuroplasticity.Objective: To summarize and critically analyze studies applying MRI markers of functional connectivity and structural changes to assess the effect of motor rehabilitation on brain neuroplasticity in MS.Methods: Literature search was performed using PubMed and EMBASE, selecting studies having as a subject motor rehabilitation and advanced MRI techniques investigating neuroplasticity in adult patients affected by MS.Results: Seventeen out of 798 papers were selected, of which 5 applied structural MRI (4 diffusion tensor imaging, 1 volumetric measurements), 7 applied functional fMRI (5 task-related fMRI, 2 resting-state fMRI) whereas the remaining 5 applied both structural and functional imaging.Discussion: The considerable data heterogeneity and the small sample sizes characterizing the studies limit interpretation and generalization of the results. Overall, motor rehabilitation promotes clinical improvement, paralleled by positive adaptive brain changes, whose features and extent depend upon different variables, including the type of rehabilitation approach. MRI markers of functional and structural connectivity should be implemented in studies testing the efficacy of motor rehabilitation. They allow for a better understanding of neuroplastic mechanisms underlying rehabilitation-mediated clinical achievements, facilitating the identification of rehabilitation strategies tailored to patients' needs and abilities.
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- 2021
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18. Long-term disability trajectories in relapsing multiple sclerosis patients treated with early intensive or escalation treatment strategies
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Pietro Iaffaldano, Giuseppe Lucisano, Francesca Caputo, Damiano Paolicelli, Francesco Patti, Mauro Zaffaroni, Vincenzo Brescia Morra, Carlo Pozzilli, Giovanna De Luca, Matilde Inglese, Giuseppe Salemi, Giorgia Teresa Maniscalco, Eleonora Cocco, Patrizia Sola, Giacomo Lus, Antonella Conte, Maria Pia Amato, Franco Granella, Claudio Gasperini, Paolo Bellantonio, Rocco Totaro, Marco Rovaris, Marco Salvetti, Valentina Liliana Adriana Torri Clerici, Roberto Bergamaschi, Davide Maimone, Elio Scarpini, Marco Capobianco, Giancarlo Comi, Massimo Filippi, and Maria Trojano
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Background and aims: No consensus exists on how aggressively to treat relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) nor on the timing of the treatment. The objective of this study was to evaluate disability trajectories in RRMS patients treated with an early intensive treatment (EIT) or with a moderate-efficacy treatment followed by escalation to higher-efficacy disease modifying therapy (ESC). Methods: RRMS patients with ⩾5-year follow-up and ⩾3 visits after disease modifying therapy (DMT) start were selected from the Italian MS Registry. EIT group included patients who received as first DMT fingolimod, natalizumab, mitoxantrone, alemtuzumab, ocrelizumab, cladribine. ESC group patients received the high efficacy DMT after ⩾1 year of glatiramer acetate, interferons, azathioprine, teriflunomide or dimethylfumarate treatment. Patients were 1:1 propensity score (PS) matched for characteristics at the first DMT. The disability trajectories were evaluated by applying a longitudinal model for repeated measures. The effect of early versus late start of high-efficacy DMT was assessed by the mean annual Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) changes compared with baseline values (delta-EDSS) in EIT and ESC groups. Results: The study cohort included 2702 RRMS patients. The PS matching procedure produced 363 pairs, followed for a median (interquartile range) of 8.5 (6.5–11.7) years. Mean annual delta-EDSS values were all significantly ( p
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- 2021
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19. Improved Gait of Persons With Multiple Sclerosis After Rehabilitation: Effects on Lower Limb Muscle Synergies, Push-Off, and Toe-Clearance
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Johanna Jonsdottir, Tiziana Lencioni, Elisa Gervasoni, Alessandro Crippa, Denise Anastasi, Ilaria Carpinella, Marco Rovaris, Davide Cattaneo, and Maurizio Ferrarin
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muscle synergies ,multiple scleorsis (MS) ,rehabilitation ,gait ,EMG ,push-off ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Introduction: Persons with MS (PwMS) have markedly reduced push-off and toe-clearance during gait compared to healthy subjects (HS). These deficits may result from alterations in neuromotor control at the ankle. To optimize rehabilitation interventions for PwMS, a crucial step is to evaluate if and how altered neuromotor control, as represented by muscle synergies, improves with rehabilitation. In this study we investigated changes in ankle motor control and associated biomechanical parameters during gait in PwMS, occurring with increase in speed after gait rehabilitation.Methods: 3D motion and EMG data were collected while 11 PwMS (age 50.3 + 11.1; EDSS 5.2 + 1.2) walked overground at self-selected speed before (T0) and after 20 sessions (T1) of intensive treadmill training. Muscle synergies were extracted using non-negative matrix factorization. Gait parameters were computed according to the LAMB protocol. Pearson's correlation coefficient was used to evaluate the similarity of motor modules between PwMS and HS. To assess differences in distal module activations representing neuromotor control at the ankle [Forward Propulsion (FPM) and Ground Clearance modules (GCM)], each module's activation timing was integrated over 100% of the gait cycle and the activation percentage index (API) was computed in six phases.Ten age matched HS provided two separate speed-matched normative datasets for T0 and T1. For speed independent comparison for the PwMs Z scores were calculated for all their gait variables.Results: In PwMS velocity increased significantly from T0 to T1 (0.74–0.90 m/s, p < 0.05). The activation profiles (API) of FPM and GCM of PwMS improved in pre-swing (p < 0.05): FPM (Mean [95% CI] [%]: T0: 12.5 [5.7–19.3] vs. T1: 9.0 [2.7–15.3]); GCM (T0: 26.7 [18.2–35.3] vs. T1: 24.5 [18.2–30.7]). This was associated with an increase in toe clearance (80.3 to 103.6 mm, p < 0.05) and a higher ankle power peak in pre-swing (1.53–1.93 W/kg, p < 0.05).Conclusion: Increased gait speed of PwMS after intensive gait training was consistent with improvements in spatio-temporal gait parameters. The most important finding of this study was the re-organization of distal leg modules related to neurophysiological changes induced by rehabilitation. This was associated with an improved ankle performance.
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- 2020
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20. HLA alleles modulate EBV viral load in multiple sclerosis
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Simone Agostini, Roberta Mancuso, Franca R. Guerini, Sandra D’Alfonso, Cristina Agliardi, Ambra Hernis, Milena Zanzottera, Nadia Barizzone, Maurizio A. Leone, Domenico Caputo, Marco Rovaris, and Mario Clerici
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Epstein-Barr virus ,HLA-class I alleles ,HLA-A*02 ,HLA-B*07 ,Multiple sclerosis ,Immunogenetics ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background The etiopathology of multiple sclerosis (MS) is believed to include genetic and environmental factors. Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles, in particular, are associated with disease susceptibility, whereas Epstein Barr Virus (EBV) infection has long been suspected to play a role in disease pathogenesis. The aim of the present study is to evaluate correlations between HLA alleles and EBV infection in MS. Methods HLA alleles, EBV viral load (VL) and serum anti-EBV antibody titers were evaluated in EBV-seropositive MS patients (N = 117) and age- and sex-matched healthy controls (HC; N = 89). Results Significantly higher DNA viral loads (p = 0.048) and EBNA-1 antibody titer (p = 0.0004) were seen in MS compared to HC. EBV VL was higher in HLA-B*07+ (p = 0.02) and HLA-DRB1*15+ (p = 0.02) MS patients, whereas it was lower in HLA-A*02+ (p = 0.04) subjects. EBV VL was highest in HLA-A*02−/B*07+/DRB1*15+ patients and lowest in HLA-A*A02+/B*07−/DRB1*15− individuals (p
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- 2018
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21. Educational and Exercise Intervention to Prevent Falls and Improve Participation in Subjects With Neurological Conditions: The NEUROFALL Randomized Controlled Trial
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Davide Cattaneo, Elisa Gervasoni, Elisabetta Pupillo, Elisa Bianchi, Irene Aprile, Isabella Imbimbo, Rita Russo, Arianna Cruciani, Andrea Turolla, Johanna Jonsdottir, Michela Agostini, Ettore Beghi, NEUROFALL Group, Angelo Montesano, Marco Rovaris, Gianluca Iacobone, Alessandra Rodano, Silvia Romi, Francesca Tettamanzi, and Polli Andrea
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prevention ,falls ,participation ,neurological disease ,rehabilitation ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Background: Falls, mobility impairments and lack of social support lead to participation restrictions in people with neurological conditions. The aim of this multicenter, single blinded randomized controlled trial was to test whether an educational program focusing on fall prevention and safe mobility reduces falls and increases social participation among people with neurological conditions.Methods: Ninety people with Stroke (n = 25), multiple sclerosis (n = 33) and Parkinson disease (n = 32), median age 63 (31–89), were randomized. A permuted block algorithm stratified by field center was used to allocate participants to an education group (EG, n = 42) consisting of an educational program focused on fall prevention and tailored balance exercises and a control group (CG, n = 48) receiving usual treatments. After baseline assessment, each participants was followed for 6 months with telephone contacts by blinded interviewers. Being fallers (>1 fall) and time to become a faller were used as primary outcomes. Community Integration Questionnaire (CIQ) and Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL) scales assessed treatment effects on social integration and daily living activities.Results: Over a median (Interquartile Range) follow-up of 189 (182–205) days, [EG = 188 (182–202), CG = 189 (182–209)] fallers were 10 in the CG and 11 in the EG (hazard ratio 0.95, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.45 to 2.5; P = 0.94). At follow-up the EG scored significantly better than CG on the CIQ (+1.7 points, CI: 0.1 to 3.3) and IADL (+2.2 points, CI: 0.4 to 4.0).Conclusions: This educational program did not reduce the risk of falls but it improved the ability to carry out activities of daily living and decreased participation restrictions in people with neurological conditions.
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- 2019
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22. Acute Fingolimod Effects on Baroreflex and Cardiovascular Autonomic Control in Multiple Sclerosis
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Vittorio Racca, Marco Rovaris, Rosella Cavarretta, Emanuele Vaini, Anastasia Toccafondi, and Marco Di Rienzo
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Background: Fingolimod, an oral drug used in multiple sclerosis (MS) treatment, exerts its action through S1P-receptor engagement. These receptors are also expressed in heart and endothelial cells. The engagement of receptors on the atrial heart myocytes may cause a slowing effect on heart rate (HR). We aimed to explore the acute effect of fingolimod on the cardiac autonomic control, a side-effect of the drug that still needs to be clarified. Methods: In 10 MS patients, we investigated the influence of the first administration of fingolimod (0.5 mg) on sympathetic and parasympathetic indexes via the analysis of the HR variability, and on the baroreflex sensitivity via sequence and alpha coefficient techniques. Results: Fingolimod produced an average HR maximal drop of 12.7 (7.8) beats/min and the minimal HR occurred after 2.73 (0.38) hours from the dose administration. The pulse interval (PI) mean value and the pNN50 and RMSSD indexes of parasympathetic drive to the heart significantly increased. Interestingly, in 6 out of 10 patients also the power in the low-frequency band (LF) increased. The baroreflex sensitivity was not modified by the first dose of the drug. Conclusions: Our findings indicate that although the first dose of fingolimod invariably activates the parasympathetic system, in several subjects, it may induce also a surge in the sympathetic cardiac drive. This suggests that not only the vagal, as usually assumed, but also the sympathetic autonomic branch should be considered in the risk profile assessment of MS patients starting treatment with fingolimod.
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- 2019
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23. The Effects of Transcutaneous Spinal Direct Current Stimulation on Neuropathic Pain in Multiple Sclerosis: Clinical and Neurophysiological Assessment
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Eliana Berra, Roberto Bergamaschi, Roberto De Icco, Carlotta Dagna, Armando Perrotta, Marco Rovaris, Maria Grazia Grasso, Maria G. Anastasio, Giovanna Pinardi, Federico Martello, Stefano Tamburin, Giorgio Sandrini, and Cristina Tassorelli
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neuropathic pain ,transcutaneous spinal direct current stimulation (ts-DCS) ,non-invasive ,nociceptive withdrawal reflex ,neuromodulation ,multiple sclerosis ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Background: Central neuropathic pain represents one of the most common symptoms in multiple sclerosis (MS) and it seriously affects quality of life. Spinal mechanisms may contribute to the pathogenesis of neuropathic pain in MS. Converging evidence from animal models and neurophysiological and clinical studies in humans suggests a potential effect of transcranial direct current stimulation (tc-DCS) on neuropathic pain. Spinal application of DCS, i.e., transcutaneous spinal DCS (ts-DCS), may modulate nociception through inhibition of spinal reflexes. Therefore, ts-DCS could represents an effective, safe and well-tolerated treatment for neuropathic pain in MS, a largely unexplored topic. This study is a pilot randomized double-blind sham-controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of ts-DCS on central neuropathic pain in MS patients.Methods: Thirty-three MS patients with central neuropathic pain were enrolled and randomly assigned to two groups in a double-blind sham-controlled design: anodal ts-DCS group (n = 19, 10 daily 20-min sessions, 2 mA) or sham ts-DCS group (n = 14, 10 daily 20-min sessions, 0 mA). The following clinical outcomes were evaluated before ts-DCS treatment (T0), after 10 days of treatment (T1) and 1 month after the end of treatment (T2): neuropathic pain symptoms inventory (NPSI), Ashworth Scale (AS) for spasticity and Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS). A subgroup of patients treated with anodal ts-DCS (n = 12) and sham ts-DCS (n = 11) also underwent a parallel neurophysiological study of the nociceptive withdrawal reflex (NWR) and the NWR temporal summation threshold (TST), two objective markers of pain processing at spinal level.Results: Anodal ts-DCS group showed a significant improvement in NPSI at T1, which persisted at T2, while we did not detect any significant change in AS and FSS. Sham ts-DCS group did not show any significant change in clinical scales. We observed a non-significant trend towards an inhibition of NWR responses in the anodal ts-DCS group at T1 and T2 when compared to baseline.Conclusions: Anodal ts-DCS seems to have an early and persisting (i.e., 1 month after treatment) clinical efficacy on central neuropathic pain in MS patients, probably through modulation of spinal nociception.Clinical Trial Registration:www.ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier #NCT02331654.
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- 2019
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24. The impact of PM2.5, PM10 and NO2 on Covid-19 severity in a sample of patients with multiple sclerosis: A case-control study
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Ponzano, Marta, primary, Schiavetti, Irene, additional, Bergamaschi, Roberto, additional, Pisoni, Enrico, additional, Bellavia, Andrea, additional, Mallucci, Giulia, additional, Carmisciano, Luca, additional, Inglese, Matilde, additional, Cordioli, Cinzia, additional, Marfia, Girolama Alessandra, additional, Cocco, Eleonora, additional, Immovilli, Paolo, additional, Pesci, Ilaria, additional, Scandellari, Cinzia, additional, Cavalla, Paola, additional, Radaelli, Marta, additional, Vianello, Marika, additional, Vitetta, Francesca, additional, Montepietra, Sara, additional, Amato, Maria Pia, additional, Fioretti, Cristina, additional, Filippi, Massimo, additional, Sartori, Arianna, additional, Caleri, Francesca, additional, Clerico, Marinella, additional, Gallo, Antonio, additional, Conte, Antonella, additional, Clerici, Raffaella, additional, De Luca, Giovanna, additional, Boneschi, Filippo Martinelli, additional, Cantello, Roberto, additional, Calabrese, Massimiliano, additional, Tortorella, Carla, additional, Rovaris, Marco, additional, Verrengia, Elena Pinuccia, additional, Patti, Francesco, additional, Morra, Vincenzo Brescia, additional, Salvetti, Marco, additional, Sormani, Maria Pia, additional, Gianmarco, Abbadessa, additional, Umberto, Aguglia, additional, Lia, Allegorico, additional, Maria, Allegri Rossi Beatrice, additional, Anastasia, Alteno, additional, Pia, Amato Maria, additional, Pietro, Annovazzi, additional, Carlo, Antozzi, additional, Lucia, Appendino, additional, Sebastiano, Arena, additional, Viola, Baione, additional, Roberto, Balgera, additional, Valeria, Barcella, additional, Damiano, Baroncini, additional, Caterina, Barrilà, additional, Mario A, Battaglia, additional, Alessandra, Bellacosa, additional, Gianmarco, Bellucci, additional, Roberto, Bergamaschi, additional, Valeria, Bergamaschi, additional, Daiana, Bezzini, additional, Beatrice, Biolzi, additional, Alvino, Bisecco, additional, Simona, Bonavita, additional, Giovanna, Borriello, additional, Chiara, Bosa, additional, Antonio, Bosco, additional, Francesca, Bovis, additional, Marco, Bozzali, additional, Laura, Brambilla, additional, Vincenzo, Brescia Morra, additional, Giampaolo, Brichetto, additional, Maria, Buccafusca, additional, Elisabetta, Bucciantini, additional, Sebastiano, Bucello, additional, Chiara, Buscarinu Maria, additional, Paola, Cabboi Maria, additional, Massimiliano, Calabrese, additional, Francesca, Calabria, additional, Francesca, Caleri, additional, Federico, Camilli, additional, Maria, Caniatti Luisa, additional, Roberto, Cantello, additional, Marco, Capobianco, additional, Ruggero, Capra, additional, Rocco, Capuano, additional, Luca, Carmisciano, additional, Patrizia, Carta, additional, Paola, Cavalla, additional, Grazia, Celani Maria, additional, Maria, Cellerino, additional, Raffaella, Cerqua, additional, Clara, Chisari, additional, Raffaella, Clerici, additional, Marinella, Clerico, additional, Eleonora, Cocco, additional, Gaia, Cola, additional, Giancarlo, Comi, additional, Paolo, Confalonieri, additional, Antonella, Conte, additional, Zaffira, Conti Marta, additional, Christian, Cordano, additional, Susanna, Cordera, additional, Cinzia, Cordioli, additional, Francesco, Corea, additional, Claudio, Correale, additional, Salvatore, Cottone, additional, Francesco, Crescenzo, additional, Erica, Curti, additional, Alessandro, d'Ambrosio, additional, Emanuele, D'Amico, additional, Chiara, Danni Maura, additional, Alessia, d'Arma, additional, Vincenzo, Dattola, additional, Stefano, de Biase, additional, Giovanna, De Luca, additional, Federica, De Mercanti Stefania, additional, Paolo, De Mitri, additional, Nicola, De Rossi, additional, Nicola, De Stefano, additional, Maria, Della Cava Fabio, additional, Marco, Della Cava, additional, Sonia, Di Lemme, additional, Mario, di Napoli, additional, Alessia, Di Sapio, additional, Renato, Docimo, additional, Anna, Dutto, additional, Luana, Evangelista, additional, Salvatore, Fanara, additional, Roberta, Fantozzi, additional, Diana, Ferraro, additional, Teresa, Ferrò Maria, additional, Massimo, Filippi, additional, Cristina, Fioretti, additional, Mario, Fratta, additional, Jessica, Frau, additional, Marzia, Fronza, additional, Roberto, Furlan, additional, Alberto, Gajofatto, additional, Antonio, Gallo, additional, Paolo, Gallo, additional, Claudio, Gasperini, additional, Anna, Ghazaryan, additional, Bruno, Giometto, additional, Francesca, Gobbin, additional, Flora, Govone, additional, Franco, Granella, additional, Erica, Grange, additional, Grazia, Grasso Maria, additional, Luigi ME, Grimaldi, additional, Angelica, Guareschi, additional, Clara, Guaschino, additional, Simone, Guerrieri, additional, Donata, Guidetti, additional, Barbara, Juergenson Ina, additional, Pietro, Iaffaldano, additional, Antonio, Ianniello, additional, Luigi, Iasevoli, additional, Paolo, Immovilli, additional, Daniele, Imperiale, additional, Teresa, Infante Maria, additional, Matilde, Inglese, additional, Rosa, Iodice, additional, Aniello, Iovino, additional, Giovanna, Konrad, additional, Doriana, Landi, additional, Roberta, Lanzillo, additional, Caterina, Lapucci, additional, Luigi, Lavorgna, additional, Rita, L'Episcopo Maria, additional, Serena, Leva, additional, Giuseppe, Liberatore, additional, Marianna, Lo Re, additional, Marco, Longoni, additional, Leonardo, Lopiano, additional, Lorena, Lorefice, additional, Matteo, Lucchini, additional, Giacomo, Lus, additional, Davide, Maimone, additional, Maria, Malentacchi, additional, Giulia, Mallucci, additional, Simona, Malucchi, additional, Rosa, Mancinelli Chiara, additional, Luca, Mancinelli, additional, Paolo, Manganotti, additional, Teresa, Maniscalco Giorgia, additional, Vittorio, Mantero, additional, Sabrina, Marangoni, additional, Damiano, Marastoni, additional, Alessandra, Marfia Girolama, additional, Fabiana, Marinelli, additional, Alessandro, Marti, additional, Filippo, Martinelli Boneschi, additional, Federco, Masserano Zoli, additional, Francesca, Matta, additional, Laura, Mendozzi, additional, Giuseppe, Meucci, additional, Silvia, Miante, additional, Giuseppina, Miele, additional, Eva, Milano, additional, Massimiliano, Mirabella, additional, Rosanna, Missione, additional, Marcello, Moccia, additional, Lucia, Moiola, additional, Sara, Montepietra, additional, Margherita, MontiBragadin, additional, Federico, Montini, additional, Roberta, Motta, additional, Raffaele, Nardone, additional, Gabri, Nicoletti Carolina, additional, Eduardo, Nobile-Orazio, additional, Agostino, Nozzolillo, additional, Marco, Onofrj, additional, Riccardo, Orlandi, additional, Anna, Palmieri, additional, Damiano, Paolicelli, additional, Livia, Pasquali, additional, Fulvio, Pasquin, additional, Luisa, Pastò, additional, Francesco, Patti, additional, Elisabetta, Pedrazzoli, additional, Paola, Perini, additional, Ilaria, Pesci, additional, Maria, Petracca, additional, Alfredo, Petrone, additional, Carlo, Piantadosi, additional, Anna M, Pietroboni, additional, Federica, Pinardi, additional, Marta, Ponzano, additional, Emilio, Portaccio, additional, Mattia, Pozzato, additional, Carlo, Pozzilli, additional, Luca, Prosperini, additional, Alessandra, Protti, additional, Eugenio, Pucci, additional, Marta, Radaelli, additional, Paolo, Ragonese, additional, Sarah, Rasia, additional, Sabrina, Realmuto, additional, Anna, Repice, additional, Eleonora, Rigoni, additional, Teresa, Rilla Maria, additional, Francesca, Rinaldi, additional, Marcello, Romano Calogero, additional, Marco, Ronzoni, additional, Marco, Rovaris, additional, Francesca, Ruscica, additional, Loredana, Sabattini, additional, Giuseppe, Salemi, additional, Marco, Salvetti, additional, Lorenzo, Saraceno, additional, Alessia, Sartori, additional, Arianna, Sartori, additional, Elvira, Sbragia, additional, Cinzia, Scandellari, additional, Ilaria, Scarano Giuditta, additional, Valentina, Scarano, additional, Irene, Schiavetti, additional, Maria, Sessa, additional, Caterina, Sgarito, additional, Grazia, Sibilia, additional, Gabriele, Siciliano, additional, Alessio, Signori, additional, Elisabetta, Signoriello, additional, Leonardo, Sinisi, additional, Francesca, Sireci, additional, Patrizia, Sola, additional, Claudio, Solaro, additional, Pia, Sormani Maria, additional, Stefano, Sotgiu, additional, Maddalena, Sparaco, additional, Laura, Stromillo Maria, additional, Silvia, Strumia, additional, Laura, Susani Emanuela, additional, Giulietta, Tabiadon, additional, Francesco, Teatini, additional, Gioacchino, Tedeschi, additional, Valentina, Tomassini, additional, Simone, Tonietti, additional, Valentina, Torri Clerici, additional, Carla, Tortorella, additional, Simona, Toscano, additional, Rocco, Totaro, additional, Maria, Trojano, additional, Maria, Trotta, additional, Gabriella, Turano, additional, Monica, Ulivelli, additional, Manzo, Valentino, additional, Giovanna, Vaula, additional, Domizia, Vecchio, additional, Marco, Vercellino, additional, Pinuccia, Verrengia Elena, additional, Marika, Vianello, additional, Eleonora, Virgilio, additional, Francesca, Vitetta, additional, Stefano, Vollaro, additional, Mauro, Zaffaroni, additional, Mauro, Zampolini, additional, Roberto, Zarbo Ignazio, additional, Antonio, Zito, additional, and Luigi, Zuliani, additional
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- 2022
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25. Progressive motor neuron syndromes with single CNS lesions and CSF oligoclonal bands : never forget solitary sclerosis!
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Eleonora Giacopuzzi Grigoli, Claudia Cinnante, Pietro Emiliano Doneddu, Narghes Calcagno, Sveva Lenti, Andrea Ciammola, Luca Maderna, Nicola Ticozzi, Massimo Castellani, Sandro Beretta, Marco Rovaris, Vincenzo Silani, and Federico Verde
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Male ,Adult ,Motor Neurons ,Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) ,Demyelinating diseases ,Motor neuron disease (MND) ,Oligoclonal bands ,Primary lateral sclerosis (PLS) ,Solitary sclerosis ,Sclerosis ,Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis ,Settore MED/37 - Neuroradiologia ,Dermatology ,General Medicine ,Syndrome ,Paresis ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Muscle Spasticity ,Humans ,Female ,Settore MED/26 - Neurologia ,Neurology (clinical) ,Motor Neuron Disease ,Aged - Abstract
We describe 3 cases of solitary sclerosis (SS), a rare condition characterized by a single inflammatory demyelinating lesion in the white matter of the brain or spinal cord. All patients had progressive limb motor impairment (patient 1, 66-year-old female: left spastic hemiparesis; patient 2, 39-year-old male: right spastic hemiparesis; patient 3, 42-year-old female: proximally predominant left upper limb weakness with amyotrophy and fasciculations). In all patients, MRI disclosed a single small T2-hyperintense demyelinating lesion: in the right anterior paramedian upper medulla, in the median-left paramedian anterior lower medulla, and in the left paramedian anterior cervical spinal cord at C4 level, respectively. In patients 1 and 2, transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) demonstrated altered motor evoked potentials (MEPs) and increased central motor conduction time (CMCT) in the affected limbs; in patient 3, needle EMG revealed chronic neurogenic changes in C5-C7 muscles of left upper limb. Patients 1 and 2 had normal brain
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- 2022
26. Intensive Multimodal Training to Improve Gait Resistance, Mobility, Balance and Cognitive Function in Persons With Multiple Sclerosis: A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial
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Johanna Jonsdottir, Elisa Gervasoni, Thomas Bowman, Rita Bertoni, Eleonora Tavazzi, Marco Rovaris, and Davide Cattaneo
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multimodal training ,gait disorders ,mobility limitation ,multiple sclerosis ,cognitive function ,balance disorder ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Introduction: Persons with multiple sclerosis (MS) have deficits in many aspects of physical and cognitive functioning that can impact on mobility and participation in daily life. The effect of a 4 week intensive multimodal treadmill training on functional mobility, balance, executive functions and participation in persons with MS with moderate to severe disability was investigated.Methods: Thirty eight persons with MS admitted to a rehabilitation center participated in a two arm randomized 2:1 controlled trial. Participants in the experimental group received supervised intensive treadmill training including cognitive and motor dual tasks (DT-group, N = 26), 5 sessions per week and a control group received the same amount of supervised strength training (S-group, N = 12). The participants were assessed before and after the rehabilitation period with the 2 Minutes Walking Test (2MWT), speed and, static and dynamic balance measures, the Frontal Assessment Battery and the Short Form-12 questionnaire. The main hypothesis was related to the superiority of the treadmill intervention based on a greater proportion of people making a clinically relevant gain (15% increase on 2MWT) in gait resistance following treatment. ANCOVA (Analysis of covariance) models adjusting for baseline measurement of the respective outcome variable, as well as sex and age, were used to evaluate differences in efficacy for all variables. P was set at 0.05.Results: Nineteen out of 26 persons in the DT-group made a clinically relevant gain and two out of 12 in the S-Group (P = 0.001). The DT-group improved more in gait resistance, speed and mobility (P < 0.01). Balance and executive functions instead improved moderately in both groups following training while perception of health remained similar in both groups.Conclusion: A four week multimodal training on treadmill was highly effective in augmenting gait resistance and mobility in moderately to severely affected persons with MS.
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- 2018
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27. Monosodium Urate Crystals Activate the Inflammasome in Primary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis
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Federica Piancone, Marina Saresella, Ivana Marventano, Francesca La Rosa, Maria Antonia Santangelo, Domenico Caputo, Laura Mendozzi, Marco Rovaris, and Mario Clerici
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multiple sclerosis ,inflammasome ,uric acid ,neuroinflammation ,immunity ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Inflammasome-driven inflammation is postulated to play a role in multiple sclerosis (MS), but there is no direct evidence that the nod-like receptor protein 3 (NLRP3) inflammasome is involved in MS pathogenesis. Uric acid was shown to be one of the “danger” signals involved in the activation of NLRP3 inflammasome; notably, the concentration of uric acid is increased in the serum and in the cerebrospinal fluid of MS individuals. To better investigate the role of the NLRP3 inflammasome in MS-associated inflammation, we primed with lipopolysaccharide and stimulated with monosodium urate crystals PBMCs of 41 MS patients with different disease phenotypes. Eleven individuals with primary progressive MS (PPMS), 10 individuals with stable relapsing–remitting MS (SMS), 10 individuals with acute relapsing–remitting MS (AMS), 10 individuals with benign MS were analyzed; 10 healthy controls were enrolled as well in the study. The expression of the NLRP3, apoptosis-associated speck-like protein containing CARD (ASC), caspase-1, caspase-8, IL-1β, and IL-18 inflammasome genes was evaluated by RT-PCR. NLRP3 and ASC-speck protein expression was analyzed by FlowSight AMNIS, whereas production of the pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-1β and IL-18 and of caspase-1 and caspase-8 was measured by ELISA in supernatants. Results showed that uric acid serum concentration was significantly increased in PPMS; in these and in AMS patients, mRNA for NLRP3, ASC, and IL-18 was upregulated as well, but caspase-8 mRNA was upregulated only in PPMS. Expression of NLRP3 and ASC-speck protein was significantly increased in PPMS, SMS, and AMS patients, but IL-18 and caspase-8 production was significantly increased only in PPMS, in whom a direct correlation between hyperuricemia and caspase-8 was detected. The NLRP3/caspase-8 inflammasome pathway is activated in PPMS, possibly as a consequence of hyperuricemia. Therapeutic strategies reducing NLRP3 activation and/or lowering hyperuricemia could be useful in the therapy of PPMS.
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- 2018
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28. The effect of air pollution on COVID‐19 severity in a sample of patients with multiple sclerosis
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Bergamaschi, Roberto, Ponzano, Marta, Schiavetti, Irene, Carmisciano, Luca, Cordioli, Cinzia, Filippi, Massimo, Radaelli, Marta, Immovilli, Paolo, Capobianco, Marco, De Rossi, Nicola, Brichetto, Giampaolo, Cocco, Eleonora, Scandellari, Cinzia, Cavalla, Paola, Pesci, Ilaria, Zito, Antonio, Confalonieri, Paolo, Marfia, Girolama Alessandra, Perini, Paola, Inglese, Matilde, Trojano, Maria, Brescia Morra, Vincenzo, Pisoni, Enrico, Tedeschi, Gioacchino, Comi, Giancarlo, Battaglia, Mario Alberto, Patti, Francesco, Salvetti, Marco, Sormani, Maria Pia, Gianmarco Abbadessa, Umberto Aguglia, Lia Allegorico, Rossi Beatrice Maria Allegri, Anastasia Alteno, Maria Pia Amato, Pietro Annovazzi, Carlo Antozzi, Lucia Appendino, Sebastiano Arena, Viola Baione, Roberto Balgera, Valeria Barcella, Damiano Baroncini, Caterina Barrilà, Mario A Battaglia, Alessandra Bellacosa, Gianmarco Bellucci, Roberto Bergamaschi, Valeria Bergamaschi, Daiana Bezzini, Beatrice Biolzi, Alvino Bisecco, Simona Bonavita, Giovanna Borriello, Chiara Bosa, Antonio Bosco, Francesca Bovis, Marco Bozzali, Laura Brambilla, Morra Vincenzo Brescia, Giampaolo Brichetto, Maria Buccafusca, Elisabetta Bucciantini, Sebastiano Bucello, Maria Chiara Buscarinu, Maria Paola Cabboi, Massimiliano Calabrese, Francesca Calabria, Francesca Caleri, Federico Camilli, Luisa Maria Caniatti, Roberto Cantello, Marco Capobianco, Ruggero Capra, Rocco Capuano, Luca Carmisciano, Patrizia Carta, Paola Cavalla, Maria Grazia Celani, Maria Cellerino, Raffaella Cerqua, Clara Chisari, Raffaella Clerici, Marinella Clerico, Eleonora Cocco, Gaia Cola, Giancarlo Comi, Paolo Confalonieri, Antonella Conte, Marta Zaffira Conti, Christian Cordano, Susanna Cordera, Cinzia Cordioli, Francesco Corea, Claudio Correale, Salvatore Cottone, Francesco Crescenzo, Erica Curti, Alessandro d'Ambrosio, Emanuele D'Amico, Maura Chiara Danni, Alessia d'Arma, Vincenzo Dattola, Stefano de Biase, Giovanna De Luca, Stefania Federica De Mercanti, Paolo De Mitri, Nicola De Rossi, Nicola De Stefano, Cava Marco Della, Mario di Napoli, Alessia Di Sapio, Renato Docimo, Anna Dutto, Luana Evangelista, Salvatore Fanara, Diana Ferraro, Maria Teresa Ferrò, Massimo Filippi, Cristina Fioretti, Mario Fratta, Jessica Frau, Marzia Fronza, Roberto Furlan, Alberto Gajofatto, Antonio Gallo, Paolo Gallo, Claudio Gasperini, Anna Ghazaryan, Bruno Giometto, Francesca Gobbin, Flora Govone, Franco Granella, Erica Grange, Maria Grazia Grasso, Angelica Guareschi, Clara Guaschino, Simone Guerrieri, Donata Guidetti, Pietro Iaffaldano, Antonio Ianniello, Luigi Iasevoli, Paolo Immovilli, Daniele Imperiale, Maria Teresa Infante, Matilde Inglese, Rosa Iodice, Aniello Iovino, Giovanna Konrad, Doriana Landi, Roberta Lanzillo, Caterina Lapucci, Luigi Lavorgna, Maria Rita L'Episcopo, Serena Leva, Giuseppe Liberatore, Re Marianna Lo, Marco Longoni, Leonardo Lopiano, Lorena Lorefice, Matteo Lucchini, Giacomo Lus, Davide Maimone, Maria Malentacchi, Giulia Mallucci, Simona Malucchi, Chiara Rosa Mancinelli, Luca Mancinelli, Paolo Manganotti, Giorgia Teresa Maniscalco, Vittorio Mantero, Sabrina Marangoni, Damiano Marastoni, Girolama Alessandra Marfia, Fabiana Marinelli, Alessandro Marti, Boneschi Filippo Martinelli, Zoli Federco Masserano, Francesca Matta, Laura Mendozzi, Giuseppe Meucci, Silvia Miante, Giuseppina Miele, Eva Milano, Massimiliano Mirabella, Rosanna Missione, Marcello Moccia, Lucia Moiola, Sara Montepietra, Margherita MontiBragadin, Federico Montini, Roberta Motta, Raffaele Nardone, Carolina Gabri Nicoletti, Eduardo Nobile-Orazio, Agostino Nozzolillo, Marco Onofrj, Riccardo Orlandi, Anna Palmieri, Damiano Paolicelli, Livia Pasquali, Luisa Pastò, Francesco Patti, Elisabetta Pedrazzoli, Paola Perini, Ilaria Pesci, Maria Petracca, Alfredo Petrone, Carlo Piantadosi, Anna M Pietroboni, Federica Pinardi, Marta Ponzano, Emilio Portaccio, Mattia Pozzato, Carlo Pozzilli, Luca Prosperini, Alessandra Protti, Marta Radaelli, Paolo Ragonese, Sarah Rasia, Sabrina Realmuto, Anna Repice, Eleonora Rigoni, Maria Teresa Rilla, Francesca Rinaldi, Calogero Marcello Romano, Marco Ronzoni, Marco Rovaris, Francesca Ruscica, Loredana Sabattini, Giuseppe Salemi, Marco Salvetti, Lorenzo Saraceno, Alessia Sartori, Arianna Sartori, Elvira Sbragia, Cinzia Scandellari, Giuditta Ilaria Scarano, Valentina Scarano, Irene Schiavetti, Maria Sessa, Caterina Sgarito, Grazia Sibilia, Gabriele Siciliano, Alessio Signori, Elisabetta Signoriello, Leonardo Sinisi, Francesca Sireci, Patrizia Sola, Claudio Solaro, Maria Pia Sormani, Stefano Sotgiu, Maddalena Sparaco, Maria Laura Stromillo, Silvia Strumia, Emanuela Laura Susani, Giulietta Tabiadon, Francesco Teatini, Gioacchino Tedeschi, Valentina Tomassini, Simone Tonietti, Clerici Valentina Torri, Carla Tortorella, Simona Toscano, Rocco Totaro, Maria Trojano, Maria Trotta, Gabriella Turano, Monica Ulivelli, Manzo Valentino, Giovanna Vaula, Domizia Vecchio, Marco Vercellino, Elena Pinuccia Verrengia, Marika Vianello, Eleonora Virgilio, Francesca Vitetta, Stefano Vollaro, Mauro Zaffaroni, Mauro Zampolini, Ignazio Roberto Zarbo, Antonio Zito, Luigi Zuliani, Bergamaschi, R, Ponzano, M, Schiavetti, I, Carmisciano, L, Cordioli, C, Filippi, M, Radaelli, M, Immovilli, P, Capobianco, M, De Rossi, N, Brichetto, G, Cocco, E, Scandellari, C, Cavalla, P, Pesci, I, Zito, A, Confalonieri, P, Marfia, Ga, Perini, P, Inglese, M, Trojano, M, Brescia Morra, V, Pisoni, E, Tedeschi, G, Comi, G, Battaglia, Ma, Patti, F, Salvetti, M, Sormani, Mp, Abbadessa, Gianmarco, Umberto, Aguglia, Lia, Allegorico, Rossi Beatrice Maria Allegri, Anastasia, Alteno, Maria Pia Amato, Pietro, Annovazzi, Carlo, Antozzi, Lucia, Appendino, Sebastiano, Arena, Viola, Baione, Roberto, Balgera, Valeria, Barcella, Damiano, Baroncini, Caterina, Barrilà, Mario, A Battaglia, Alessandra, Bellacosa, Gianmarco, Bellucci, Roberto, Bergamaschi, Valeria, Bergamaschi, Daiana, Bezzini, Beatrice, Biolzi, Bisecco, Alvino, Bonavita, Simona, Giovanna, Borriello, Chiara, Bosa, Bosco, Antonio, Francesca, Bovi, Marco, Bozzali, Laura, Brambilla, Morra Vincenzo Brescia, Giampaolo, Brichetto, Maria, Buccafusca, Elisabetta, Bucciantini, Sebastiano, Bucello, Maria Chiara Buscarinu, Maria Paola Cabboi, Massimiliano, Calabrese, Francesca, Calabria, Francesca, Caleri, Federico, Camilli, Luisa Maria Caniatti, Roberto, Cantello, Marco, Capobianco, Ruggero, Capra, Capuano, Rocco, Luca, Carmisciano, Patrizia, Carta, Paola, Cavalla, Maria Grazia Celani, Maria, Cellerino, Raffaella, Cerqua, Clara, Chisari, Raffaella, Clerici, Marinella, Clerico, Eleonora, Cocco, Gaia, Cola, Giancarlo, Comi, Paolo, Confalonieri, Antonella, Conte, Marta Zaffira Conti, Christian, Cordano, Susanna, Cordera, Cinzia, Cordioli, Corea, Francesco, Claudio, Correale, Salvatore, Cottone, Francesco, Crescenzo, Erica, Curti, Alessandro, D'Ambrosio, Emanuele, D'Amico, Maura Chiara Danni, Alessia, D'Arma, Vincenzo, Dattola, Stefano de Biase, Giovanna De Luca, Stefania Federica De Mercanti, Paolo De Mitri, Nicola De Rossi, Nicola De Stefano, Cava Marco Della, Mario di Napoli, Alessia Di Sapio, Docimo, Renato, Anna, Dutto, Luana, Evangelista, Salvatore, Fanara, Diana, Ferraro, Maria Teresa Ferrò, Massimo, Filippi, Cristina, Fioretti, Fratta, Mario, Jessica, Frau, Marzia, Fronza, Roberto, Furlan, Alberto, Gajofatto, Gallo, Antonio, Paolo, Gallo, Claudio, Gasperini, Anna, Ghazaryan, Bruno, Giometto, Francesca, Gobbin, Flora, Govone, Franco, Granella, Erica, Grange, Maria Grazia Grasso, Angelica, Guareschi, Clara, Guaschino, Simone, Guerrieri, Donata, Guidetti, Pietro, Iaffaldano, Antonio, Ianniello, Luigi, Iasevoli, Paolo, Immovilli, Daniele, Imperiale, Maria Teresa Infante, Matilde, Inglese, Rosa, Iodice, Aniello, Iovino, Giovanna, Konrad, Doriana, Landi, Roberta, Lanzillo, Caterina, Lapucci, Luigi, Lavorgna, Maria Rita L'Episcopo, Serena, Leva, Giuseppe, Liberatore, Re Marianna Lo, Marco, Longoni, Leonardo, Lopiano, Lorena, Lorefice, Matteo, Lucchini, Lus, Giacomo, Davide, Maimone, Maria, Malentacchi, Giulia, Mallucci, Simona, Malucchi, Chiara Rosa Mancinelli, Luca, Mancinelli, Paolo, Manganotti, Giorgia Teresa Maniscalco, Vittorio, Mantero, Sabrina, Marangoni, Damiano, Marastoni, Girolama Alessandra Marfia, Fabiana, Marinelli, Alessandro, Marti, Boneschi Filippo Martinelli, Zoli Federco Masserano, Francesca, Matta, Laura, Mendozzi, Giuseppe, Meucci, Silvia, Miante, Miele, Giuseppina, Eva, Milano, Massimiliano, Mirabella, Missione, Rosanna, Marcello, Moccia, Lucia, Moiola, Sara, Montepietra, Margherita, Montibragadin, Federico, Montini, Roberta, Motta, Raffaele, Nardone, Carolina Gabri Nicoletti, Eduardo, Nobile-Orazio, Agostino, Nozzolillo, Marco, Onofrj, Riccardo, Orlandi, Palmieri, Anna, Damiano, Paolicelli, Livia, Pasquali, Luisa, Pastò, Francesco, Patti, Elisabetta, Pedrazzoli, Paola, Perini, Ilaria, Pesci, Maria, Petracca, Alfredo, Petrone, Carlo, Piantadosi, Anna, M Pietroboni, Federica, Pinardi, Marta, Ponzano, Emilio, Portaccio, Mattia, Pozzato, Carlo, Pozzilli, Luca, Prosperini, Alessandra, Protti, Marta, Radaelli, Paolo, Ragonese, Sarah, Rasia, Sabrina, Realmuto, Anna, Repice, Eleonora, Rigoni, Maria Teresa Rilla, Francesca, Rinaldi, Calogero Marcello Romano, Marco, Ronzoni, Marco, Rovari, Francesca, Ruscica, Loredana, Sabattini, Giuseppe, Salemi, Marco, Salvetti, Lorenzo, Saraceno, Alessia, Sartori, Arianna, Sartori, Elvira, Sbragia, Cinzia, Scandellari, Giuditta Ilaria Scarano, Valentina, Scarano, Irene, Schiavetti, Maria, Sessa, Caterina, Sgarito, Grazia, Sibilia, Gabriele, Siciliano, Alessio, Signori, Signoriello, Elisabetta, Leonardo, Sinisi, Francesca, Sireci, Patrizia, Sola, Claudio, Solaro, Maria Pia Sormani, Stefano, Sotgiu, Sparaco, Maddalena, Maria Laura Stromillo, Silvia, Strumia, Emanuela Laura Susani, Giulietta, Tabiadon, Francesco, Teatini, Tedeschi, Gioacchino, Valentina, Tomassini, Simone, Tonietti, Clerici Valentina Torri, Carla, Tortorella, Simona, Toscano, Rocco, Totaro, Maria, Trojano, Trotta, Maria Consiglia, Gabriella, Turano, Monica, Ulivelli, Manzo, Valentino, Giovanna, Vaula, Domizia, Vecchio, Marco, Vercellino, Elena Pinuccia Verrengia, Marika, Vianello, Eleonora, Virgilio, Francesca, Vitetta, Stefano, Vollaro, Mauro, Zaffaroni, Mauro, Zampolini, Ignazio Roberto Zarbo, Zito, Guido Antonio, Bergamaschi, R., Ponzano, M., Schiavetti, I., Carmisciano, L., Cordioli, C., Filippi, M., Radaelli, M., Immovilli, P., Capobianco, M., De Rossi, N., Brichetto, G., Cocco, E., Scandellari, C., Cavalla, P., Pesci, I., Zito, A., Confalonieri, P., Marfia, G. A., Perini, P., Inglese, M., Trojano, M., Brescia Morra, V., Pisoni, E., Tedeschi, G., Comi, G., Battaglia, M. A., Patti, F., Salvetti, M., Sormani, M. P., Bergamaschi, Roberto, Ponzano, Marta, Schiavetti, Irene, Carmisciano, Luca, Cordioli, Cinzia, Filippi, Massimo, Radaelli, Marta, Immovilli, Paolo, Capobianco, Marco, De Rossi, Nicola, Brichetto, Giampaolo, Cocco, Eleonora, Scandellari, Cinzia, Cavalla, Paola, Pesci, Ilaria, Zito, Antonio, Confalonieri, Paolo, Marfia, Girolama Alessandra, Perini, Paola, Inglese, Matilde, Trojano, Maria, Brescia Morra, Vincenzo, Pisoni, Enrico, Comi, Giancarlo, Battaglia, Mario Alberto, Patti, Francesco, Salvetti, Marco, Sormani, Maria, Pia, Gianmarco, Abbadessa, Alvino, Bisecco, Simona, Bonavita, Antonio, Bosco, Rocco, Capuano, Francesco, Corea, Renato, Docimo, Mario, Fratta, Antonio, Gallo, Iodice, Rosa, Iovino, Aniello, Lanzillo, Roberta, Giacomo, Lu, Giuseppina, Miele, Rosanna, Missione, Moccia, Marcello, Anna, Palmieri, Elisabetta, Signoriello, Maddalena, Sparaco, Gioacchino, Tedeschi, Maria, Trotta, Antonio, Zito, and Luigi, Zuliani
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air pollution ,coronavirus ,multiple sclerosis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate analysis ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Clinical Sciences ,Air pollution ,Sample (statistics) ,Neurodegenerative ,Settore MED/26 ,medicine.disease_cause ,Autoimmune Disease ,law.invention ,Sustainable Cities and Communities ,Clinical Research ,law ,Humans ,Medicine ,Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,MuSC-19 study group ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,Multiple sclerosis ,Neurosciences ,COVID-19 ,Retrospective cohort study ,Original Articles ,medicine.disease ,Intensive care unit ,Particulate Matter ,Air Pollution ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Brain Disorders ,coronaviru ,Settore MED/26 - NEUROLOGIA ,Good Health and Well Being ,Neurology ,multiple sclerosi ,Emergency medicine ,Original Article ,Neurology (clinical) ,Ordered logit ,business ,Human - Abstract
Background and purpose Some studies have shown that air pollution, often assessed by thin particulate matter with diameter below 2.5 µg/m3 (PM2.5), may contribute to severe COVID‐19 courses, as well as play a role in the onset and evolution of multiple sclerosis (MS). However, the impact of air pollution on COVID‐19 has never been explored specifically amongst patients with MS (PwMS). This retrospective observational study aims to explore associations between PM2.5 and COVID‐19 severity amongst PwMS. Methods Data were retrieved from an Italian web‐based platform (MuSC‐19) which includes PwMS with COVID‐19. PM2.5 2016–2018 average concentrations were provided by the Copernicus Atmospheric Monitoring Service. Italian patients inserted in the platform from 15 January 2020 to 9 April 2021 with a COVID‐19 positive test were included. Ordered logistic regression models were used to study associations between PM2.5 and COVID‐19 severity. Results In all, 1087 patients, of whom 13% required hospitalization and 2% were admitted to an intensive care unit or died, were included. Based on the multivariate analysis, higher concentrations of PM2.5 increased the risk of worse COVID‐19 course (odds ratio 1.90; p = 0.009). Conclusions Even if several other factors explain the unfavourable course of COVID‐19 in PwMS, the role of air pollutants must be considered and further investigated., Air pollution, often assessed by particulate matter with diameter below 2.5 µg/m3, may contribute to severe COVID‐19 courses. 1087 patients were included, of whom 13% required hospitalization and 2% were admitted to an intensive care unit or died. Even if several other factors explain the unfavourable course of COVID‐19 in patients with multiple sclerosis, the role of air pollutants must be considered and further investigated.
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- 2021
29. Effects of voice rehabilitation in people with MS: A double-blinded long-term randomized controlled trial
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Arianna Napoletano, Chiara Vitali, Laura Tomasoni, Valeria Crispiatico, Cinzia Baldanzi, Davide Cattaneo, Francesca Tedeschi, Elisabetta Groppo, and Marco Rovaris
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Double blinded ,business.industry ,Multiple sclerosis ,Hypophonia ,Parkinson Disease ,medicine.disease ,Term (time) ,law.invention ,Treatment Outcome ,Voice Training ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Neurology ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Humans ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Voice rehabilitation - Abstract
Background: Hypophonia is a prevailing problem in people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS). However, evidence supporting the effectiveness of voice rehabilitation is lacking. Objective: The aim of this study was to identify the most effective method to reduce hypophonia. Methods: In this randomized controlled trial, 44 PwMS were randomized to intensive and high-effort voice treatment groups, the LSVT-LOUD®, and conventional treatment group. Subjects received 16 treatments (4 sessions/week) lasting 45 minutes. The primary outcome was voice intensity (dB) in monologue, vocalization, and sentences while voice handicap index (VHI) measured voice self-perception. Outcomes were assessed by a blinded observer at baseline, post-treatment, and 15-month follow-up (FU). Results: Linear models revealed a significant post-intervention between-group mean difference in favor of LSVT-LOUD for monologue: +6.3 dB (95% CI: 2.5 to 10.1); vocalization: +7.4 dB (95% CI: 2.3 to 12.5); and sentences: +9.5 dB (95% CI: 4.7 to 14.3). However, 43.7% PwMS in the LSVT-LOUD and 10% in the conventional treatment group obtained a full recovery of voice intensity (>60 dB) post-treatment, Fisher’s test = 13.3, p Conclusion: LSVT-LOUD can be a valid treatment to increase voice intensity in PwMS. However, results suggest the need for FU interventions targeting maintenance.
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- 2021
30. Multidisciplinary Rehabilitation is Efficacious and Induces Neural Plasticity in Multiple Sclerosis even when Complicated by Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy
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Elisabetta Groppo, Francesca Baglio, Davide Cattaneo, Eleonora Tavazzi, Niels Bergsland, Sonia Di Tella, Riccardo Parelli, Ilaria Carpinella, Cristina Grosso, Ruggero Capra, and Marco Rovaris
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multidisciplinary rehabilitation ,multiple sclerosis ,progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy ,functional magnetic resonance imaging ,neuroplasticity ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
A 48-year-old woman with multiple sclerosis (MS), treated with natalizumab for more than one year without clinical and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) signs of disease activity, was diagnosed with definite progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML). She presented with subacute motor deficit of the right upper limb (UL), followed by involvement of the homolateral leg and urinary urgency. The patient was treated with steroids and plasma exchange. On follow-up MRI scans, the PML lesion remained stable and no MS rebounds were observed, but the patient complained of a progressive worsening of the right UL motor impairment, becoming dependent in most activities of daily living. A cycle of multidisciplinary rehabilitation (MDR) was then started, including daily sessions of UL robot therapy and occupational therapy. Functional MRI (fMRI) was acquired before and at the end of the MDR cycle using a motor task which consisted of 2 runs: in one run the patient was asked to observe while the second one consisted of hand grasping movements. At the end of the rehabilitation period, both the velocity and the smoothness of arm trajectories during robot-based reaching movements were significantly improved. After MDR, compared with baseline, fMRI showed significantly increased functional activation within the sensory-motor network in the active, motor task, while no significant differences were found in the observational task. MDR in MS, including robot-assisted UL training, seems to be clinically efficacious and to have a significant impact on brain functional reorganization on a short-term, even in the presence of superimposed tissue damage provoked by PML.
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- 2017
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31. Sativex in resistant multiple sclerosis spasticity: Discontinuation study in a large population of Italian patients (SA.FE. study).
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Silvia Messina, Claudio Solaro, Isabella Righini, Roberto Bergamaschi, Simona Bonavita, Roberto Bruno Bossio, Vincenzo Brescia Morra, Gianfranco Costantino, Paola Cavalla, Diego Centonze, Giancarlo Comi, Salvatore Cottone, Maura Chiara Danni, Ada Francia, Alberto Gajofatto, Claudio Gasperini, Mauro Zaffaroni, Loredana Petrucci, Elisabetta Signoriello, Giorgia Teresa Maniscalco, Gabriella Spinicci, Manuela Matta, Massimiliano Mirabella, Graziella Pedà, Letizia Castelli, Marco Rovaris, Edoardo Sessa, Daniele Spitaleri, Damiano Paolicelli, Alfredo Granata, Mario Zappia, Francesco Patti, and SA.FE. study group
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The approval of Sativex for the management of multiple sclerosis (MS) spasticity opened a new opportunity to many patients. In Italy, the healthcare payer can be fully reimbursed by the involved pharma company with the cost of treatment for patients not responding after a 4 week (28 days) trial period (Payment by Results, PbR), and 50% reimbursed with the cost of 6 weeks (42 days) treatment for other patients discontinuing (Cost Sharing, CS). The aim of our study was to describe the Sativex discontinuation profile from a large population of spasticity treated Italian MS patients.We collected data of patients from 30 MS centres across the country starting Sativex between January 2014 and February 2015. Data were collected from the mandatory Italian Medicines Agency (AIFA) web-registry. Predictors of treatment discontinuation were assessed using a multivariate Cox proportional regression analysis.During the observation period 631 out of 1597 (39.5%) patients discontinued Sativex. The Kaplan-Meier estimates curve showed that 333 patients (20.8%) discontinued treatment at 4 weeks while 422 patients (26.4%) discontinued at 6 weeks. We found after adjusted modeling that a higher NRS score at T1 (adjHR 2.23, 95% 2.07-2.41, p
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- 2017
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32. Factors Associated With Treatment-Related Changes in Voice Volume in People With Multiple Sclerosis
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Valeria Crispiatico, Cinzia Baldanzi, Martina Bertuletti, Silvia Grassi, Francesca Tedeschi, Elisabetta Groppo, Marco Rovaris, Davide Cattaneo, and Chiara Vitali
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Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Neurology (clinical) ,Articles - Abstract
BACKGROUND Vocal disorders are frequent in people with multiple sclerosis (MS). Cognitive impairment, fatigue, depression, and other clinical characteristics can be associated with treatment effectiveness in rehabilitation. Finding baseline characteristics that identify those who are responding to treatment can help the clinical decision-making process, which can then help improve the effectiveness of voice treatment. We developed a model to identify factors associated with treatment-related improvement on voice intensity in people with MS. METHODS Data are from a randomized controlled trial of the effects of voice therapy. Forty-four people with MS were enrolled and randomized to receive Lee Silverman Voice Treatment LOUD, specifically addressing voice intensity, or conventional speech-therapy group. Voice intensity (dB) was measured during monologue before and after treatment and was used to differentiate those who responded (posttreatment voice intensity > 60 dB) from those who did not. Possible associated factors were cognitive impairment, fatigue, depression, disability, and disease duration. Associations were assessed by univariate logistic regression and univariate and multivariate linear regressions. RESULTS Mean ± SD monologue voice intensity is improved in the whole sample (before rehabilitation: 51.8 ± 4.2 dB; and after rehabilitation 57.0 ± 6.5 dB; P < .001), and 11 people with MS (27.5%) responded to treatment. Specificity of treatment was associated with the return to normal voice intensity (OR, 14.28; 95% CI, 12.17–309.56) and we found a linear association between voice improvement and the specificity of treatment (6.65 [SE = 1.54] dB; P < .05). Moreover, the analysis revealed a nonlinear association between improvement and fatigue, suggesting increased benefits for people with MS with moderate fatigue. Other factors were not significantly associated with treatment effectiveness. CONCLUSIONS Moderate fatigue and the specificity of the intervention seem to be key factors associated with clinically relevant improvement in voice intensity even in people with MS with a high level of disability and long disease duration.
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- 2022
33. An interactive Multiple Sclerosis Fitness Intervention Training (MS-FIT) with Pilates exercises. Development and usability of a Kinect-based system. (Preprint)
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Andrea Tacchino, Michela Ponzio, Paolo Confalonieri, Letizia Leocani, Matilde Inglese, Diego Centonze, Eleonora Cocco, Paolo Gallo, Damiano Paolicelli, Marco Rovaris, Loredana Sabattini, Gioacchino Tedeschi, Luca Prosperini, Francesco Patti, Placido Bramanti, Elisabetta Pedrazzoli, Mario Alberto Battaglia, and Giampaolo Brichetto
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BACKGROUND Balance impairments are common in multiple sclerosis (MS) with reduced ability to maintain position and delayed responses to postural adjustments. Pilates is a popular alternative method for balance training that may reduce the rapid worsening of symptoms and the increased risk of secondary conditions (e.g. depression) frequently associated with physical inactivity. An Italian network of fifteen Centres specialized in MS rehabilitation developed the MS-FIT exergame to autonomously train balance through Pilates exercises. OBJECTIVE Here, we describe the design, development and usability testing of MS-FIT, a Kinect-based tool implementing Pilates exercises customized for MS. METHODS MS-FIT has been developed through a User-Centered Design approach (design, prototype, user feedback and analysis) allowing gaining the target user’s perspective. A team composed of one physical therapist, two game programmers and one game designer provided the first version of MS-FIT that integrated knowledge and experience of the team with MS literature findings related to Pilates exercises and balance interventions based on exergames. MS-FIT, developed by using the Unity 3D game engine software with Kinect Sensor V2 for Windows, implements exercises for breathing, posture and balance. Feedbacks from neurologists, physiatrists, physical therapists and people with MS (PwMS) were collected to customize the tool for a use in MS. The MS-FIT context is the travel around the world to visit some of the most important cities in order to learn aspects of their culture through pictures and stories. At each stay of the travel, the avatar of a teacher of Pilates shows the user the exercises to be performed. Nine PwMS (4 females; mean age: 42.89 ± 11.97 years; mean disease duration 10.19 ± 9.18 years; Expanded Disability Status Scale: 3.17 ± 0.75) were involved in three outpatient user-test sessions of 30 minutes; the MS-FIT usability was assessed through an ad-hoc questionnaire (maximum value = 5; higher the score, higher the usability) evaluating easiness-to-use, playability, enjoyment, satisfaction and acceptance. RESULTS All nine PwMS completed the sessions of user-test and answered the ad-hoc questionnaire. The average score on each item ranged from 3.78 and 4.11, which indicated a high usability level. The feedbacks and suggestions provided by the 9 PwMS and by the 5 therapists involved in the user-test were implemented to refine the first prototype in order to release the MS-FIT 2.0. CONCLUSIONS MS-FIT is a highly usable tool and is a promising system for enhancing motivation and engagement of PwMS in performing exercise with the aim to improve their physical status.
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- 2022
34. Are modular activations altered in lower limb muscles of persons with Multiple Sclerosis during walking? Evidence from muscle synergies and biomechanical analysis
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Tiziana Lencioni, Johanna Jonsdottir, Davide Cattaneo, Alessandro Crippa, Elisa Gervasoni, Marco Rovaris, Emilio Bizzi, and Maurizio Ferrarin
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Gait ,Multiple Sclerosis ,EMG ,Muscle Synergy ,lower limb ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
BackgroundPersons with Multiple Sclerosis frequently have gait deficits that lead to diminished activities of daily living. Identification of motoneuron activity patterns may elucidate new insight into impaired locomotor coordination and underlying neural systems. The aim of the present study was to investigate muscle synergies, identified by motor modules and their activation profiles, in persons with Multiple Sclerosis (PwMS) during walking compared to those of healthy subjects (HS), as well as, exploring relationship of muscle synergies with walking ability of PwMS.MethodsSeventeen PwMS walked at their natural speed while 12 HS walked at slower than their natural speeds in order to provide normative gait values at matched speeds (spatio-temporal, kinematic and kinetic parameters and electromyography signals). Non-negative matrix factorization was used to identify muscle synergies from eight muscles. Pearson's correlation coefficient was used to evaluate the similarity of motor modules between PwMS and HS. To assess differences in module activations, each module's activation timing was integrated over 100% of gait cycle and the activation percentage was computed in six phases.ResultsFifty-nine% of PwMS and 58% of HS had 4 modules while the remaining of both populations had 3 modules. Module 2 (related to soleus, medial and lateral gastrocnemius primarily involved in mid and terminal stance) and Module 3 (related to tibialis anterior and rectus femoris primarily involved in early stance, and early and late swing) were comparable across all subjects regardless of synergies number. PwMS had shorter stride length, longer double support phase and push off deficit with respect to HS (p
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- 2016
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35. Instrumentally assessed gait quality is more relevant than gait endurance and velocity to explain patient‐reported walking ability in early‐stage multiple sclerosis
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Ilaria Carpinella, Andrea Tacchino, Rachele Di Giovanni, Davide Cattaneo, Elisa Gervasoni, Claudio Solaro, Maurizio Ferrarin, Marco Rovaris, P. Confalonieri, Denise Anastasi, and Giampaolo Brichetto
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Walk Test ,Walking ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Gait (human) ,medicine ,Humans ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Gait ,Balance (ability) ,Expanded Disability Status Scale ,business.industry ,Multiple sclerosis ,Healthy subjects ,medicine.disease ,Trunk ,Neurology ,Walk test ,Patient-reported outcome ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,human activities ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE People with multiple sclerosis (PwMS) often report walking limitations even when the gold standard Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) indicates normal walking endurance/autonomy. The present multicenter study on early-stage PwMS aims at analyzing which aspects are associated with patient-reported walking limitations measured with the 12-item Multiple Sclerosis Walking Scale (MSWS-12). METHODS Eighty-two PwMS (EDSS ≤ 2.5) were assessed using the Fullerton Advanced Balance Scale-short (FAB-s), the Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS) and the 6-min Walk Test (6MWT), the latter administered also to 21 healthy subjects. Participants performed the 6MWT wearing three inertial sensors on ankles and trunk. Instrumented metrics describing gait velocity (stride length and frequency) and quality (regularity, symmetry, instability) were computed from sensor data. Fatigue (FSS), balance (FAB-s), walking endurance (6MWT) and instrumented metrics were entered in a multiple regression model with MSWS-12 as dependent variable. RESULTS Gait symmetry, gait instability, fatigue and balance were significantly associated with self-rated walking ability, whilst walking endurance and velocity were not. Fatigue, balance, gait symmetry and instability were more impaired in participants reporting mild-to-moderate (MSMM-PWL , 25 ≤ MSWS-12
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- 2021
36. Cancer risk for multiple sclerosis patients treated with azathioprine and disease-modifying therapies: an Italian observational study
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Sonia Di Tella, Antonio Marangi, Alessia d’Arma, Laura Mendozzi, Marco Turatti, Milena Sant, Loredana La Mantia, Roberto Lillini, Marco Rovaris, Maria Donata Benedetti, and Domenico Caputo
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Adult ,Risk ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Settore M-PSI/02 - PSICOBIOLOGIA E PSICOLOGIA FISIOLOGICA ,Population ,Azathioprine ,Dermatology ,Disease ,Multiple sclerosis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neoplasms ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Disease-modifying therapies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Cancer ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Standardized mortality ratio ,Cohort ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The risk of malignancy associated with sequential disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) for patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) is uncertain. The aim of this study was to analyze the risk of cancer in patients with MS treated with azathioprine (AZA) and the influence of sequential DMTs on the risk. We retrospectively enrolled a cohort of AZA-treated MS patients followed in two Italian centers from 1987 to 2019. The ratio between observed and expected cancers in the Italian general population was calculated as standardized incidence ratio (SIR). Associations between AZA and DMTs and cancer were estimated by Cox proportional hazards model. We identified 500 AZA-treated MS patients, followed for a median time of 9.7 (0.1–45.7) years: 61.8% of them were treated with DMTs. We found 22 cases of cancer (4.4%). The SIR was 1.14 (95% CI 0.98–1.29), not significantly increased in comparison with the general population. However, the risk was significantly higher in the quintiles of age 32–45, SIR 1.21 (95% CI 1.21–1.42), and 46–51, SIR 1.11 (95% CI 1.11–1.32) than in older cases. Age at AZA treatment onset was the only covariate significantly related to cancer incidence (HR = 1.049, 95% CI 1.007–1.093). The exposure to other DMTs did not modify the risk. The risk of malignancy in MS patients after AZA was similar to that of the general population and did not change with other DMTs sequential treatments. The increased risk in the younger ages should be considered in treatment assessment.
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- 2021
37. Social Cognition Training for Enhancing Affective and Cognitive Theory of Mind in Schizophrenia: A Systematic Review and a Meta-Analysis
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Alessia d’Arma, Antonella Marchetti, Francesca Baglio, Sara Isernia, Sonia Di Tella, Marco Rovaris, and Annalisa Valle
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Social Cognition ,neuropsychology ,Theory of Mind ,Psychological intervention ,050109 social psychology ,Social interaction ,Education ,Social cognition ,Intervention (counseling) ,Theory of mind ,0502 economics and business ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,General Psychology ,training and development ,05 social sciences ,Cognition ,medicine.disease ,Settore M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Schizophrenia ,Meta-analysis ,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous) ,Schizophrenic Psychology ,Psychology ,050203 business & management ,Social cognitive theory ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
People with schizophrenia disorder show the presence of a deficit in social cognition (SC). Several proposals of intervention for social cognitive deficits in schizophrenia have been raised. The present study aimed to provide an update to the state-of-the-art of SC training in schizophrenia, with specific analysis on their efficacy on ToM, which is deeply involved with social dysfunction in this disorder. Furthermore, we proposed to investigate the efficacy of SC training both on ToM cognitive and affective components. We conducted a systematic review, screening 5251 articles; 26 studies met our inclusion criteria. Interventions included were very heterogeneous. To test the efficacy of SC training on ToM domain, we conducted a meta-analysis. Our results showed that SC multidimensional training programs have a positive effect on ToM domain, with a moderate effect on both cognitive and affective ToM subcomponents. Future investigations about which could be the best option for the enhancement of SC in schizophrenia are needed, contributing to expanding the state-of-the-art of SC training in this disorder.
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- 2020
38. Local Dynamic Stability of Gait in People With Early Multiple Sclerosis and No-to-Mild Neurological Impairment
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Davide Cattaneo, Elisa Gervasoni, Denise Anastasi, Marco Rovaris, Giampaolo Brichetto, Maurizio Ferrarin, P. Confalonieri, Andrea Tacchino, Luca Prosperini, Claudio Solaro, Rachele Di Giovanni, Antonio Caronni, and Ilaria Carpinella
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030506 rehabilitation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Biomedical Engineering ,Walking ,Stability (probability) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Gait (human) ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Dynamic balance ,Gait ,Fatigue ,Balance (ability) ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Multiple sclerosis ,Rehabilitation ,Work (physics) ,medicine.disease ,Trunk ,Walking Speed ,0305 other medical science ,business ,human activities ,Neurological impairment ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Poor dynamic balance, such as poor walking stability, is a hallmark of multiple sclerosis. Instrumental measures of local dynamic stability (LDS, e.g. short-term Lyapunov’s exponents, sLyEs) are genuine measures of walking stability and increasingly used as dynamic balance indicators. The current work aims to investigate if people with multiple sclerosis (PWMS) with no clinical evidence of gait impairment suffer poor LDS of gait. Eighty PWMS with minimal impairment (EDSS ≤2.5) and twenty controls completed the Six-Minute Walk Test (6MWT) at their maximum speed, wearing inertial sensors. sLyEs were calculated from trunk vertical, mediolateral and anteroposterior (sLyEAP) acceleration. PWMS also completed a full clinical assessment including gait, balance and fatigue. Gait speed was lower in PWMS than controls (−15%), while sLyEs were larger in PWMS (+12%), even when adjusting for the different gait speed. High sLyEAP was associated with low gait speed, high impact of disease (including high fatigue) and poor balance, the three variables returned by a principal component analysis of the dataset of clinical measures. PWMS suffer poor LDS of gait, as indicated by large sLyEs. The association between high sLyEAP and poor balance supports the validity of sLyEAP as a dynamic balance measure. The inverse relationship between sLyEAP and gait speed is in line with the view that good balance is decisive for high gait speed. Finally, these findings are in line with the vicious circle linking poor balance and fatigue in PWMS, with fatigue worsening balance and poor balance leading to fatigue.
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- 2020
39. Simultaneous quantification of natural and inducible regulatory T-cell subsets during interferon-β therapy of multiple sclerosis patients
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Marta Zaffira Conti, Luisa Imberti, Federico Serana, Andrea Visconti, Marco Chiarini, Valentina Torri Clerici, Diego Bertoli, Marco Rovaris, Claudio Solaro, Viviana Giustini, Diana Ferraro, Simonetta Galgani, Ruggero Capra, Alessandra Sottini, and Cristina Scarpazza
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0301 basic medicine ,Regulatory T cell ,lcsh:Medicine ,T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,CD49b ,Flow cytometry ,Multiple sclerosis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting ,0302 clinical medicine ,T-Lymphocyte Subsets ,Interferon ,medicine ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Gene ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Effector ,CD46 ,Research ,Interferon-β ,Regulatory T cells ,Treg subsets ,lcsh:R ,Interferon-beta ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background The mechanisms underlying the therapeutic activity of interferon-β in multiple sclerosis are still not completely understood. In the present study, we evaluated the short and long-term effects of interferon-β treatment on different subsets of regulatory T cells in relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis patients biologically responsive to treatment because of mixovirus resistance protein A inducibility. Methods In this prospective longitudinal study, subsets of natural regulatory T cells (naïve, central memory and effector memory) and inducible regulatory T cells (Tr1), as well as in vitro-induced regulatory T cells (Tr1-like cells), were simultaneously quantified by flow cytometry in samples prepared from 148 therapy-naïve multiple sclerosis patients obtained before and after 6, 12, 18, and 24 months of interferon-β-1a treatment. mRNA for interleukin-10 and Tr1-related genes (CD18, CD49b, and CD46, together with Cyt-1 and Cyt-2 CD46-associated isoforms) were quantified in Tr1-like cells. Results Despite profound inter-individual variations in the modulation of all regulatory T-cell subsets, the percentage of natural regulatory T cells increased after 6, 12, and 24 months of interferon-β treatment. This increase was characterized by the expansion of central and effector memory regulatory T-cell subsets. The percentage of Tr1 significantly enhanced at 12 months of therapy and continued to be high at the subsequent evaluation points. Patients experiencing relapses displayed a higher percentage of naïve regulatory T cells and a lower percentage of central memory regulatory T cells and of Tr1 before starting interferon-β therapy. In addition, an increase over time of central memory and of Tr1 was observed only in patients with stable disease. However, in vitro-induced Tr1-like cells, prepared from patients treated for 24 months, produced less amount of interleukin-10 mRNA compared with pre-treatment Tr1-like cells. Conclusion Interferon-β induces the expansion of T regulatory subsets endowed with a high suppressive activity, especially in clinically stable patients. The overall concurrent modulation of natural and inducible regulatory T-cell subsets might explain the therapeutic effects of interferon-β in multiple sclerosis patients.
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- 2020
40. Listening to the neurological teams for multiple sclerosis: the SMART project
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M. Rezzonico, Rocco Totaro, S. Bucello, Cinzia Cordioli, Alessandra Lugaresi, Alvino Bisecco, Martina Petruzzo, Paola Cavalla, Luisa Pastò, Eleonora Cocco, Giovanna Borriello, Roberta Fantozzi, S. Marangoni, M. Di Giuseppe, Edoardo Sessa, F. Caleri, Maria Liguori, W. Neri, M. G. Marini, L. Locatelli, G. L. Mancardi, C. Tortorella, K. Plewnia, S. Romano, P. Perini, Lucia Moiola, Francesco Patti, E. Mutta, Paola Chesi, Paola Valentino, A. Repice, Franco Granella, L. Alivernini, Marco Rovaris, M. Gattuso, Chesi P., Marini M.G., Mancardi G.L., Patti F., Alivernini L., Bisecco A., Borriello G., Bucello S., Caleri F., Cavalla P., Cocco E., Cordioli C., Di Giuseppe M., Fantozzi R., Gattuso M., Granella F., Liguori M., Locatelli L., Lugaresi A., Marangoni S., Moiola L., Mutta E., Neri W., Pasto L., Perini P., Petruzzo M., Plewnia K., Repice A.M., Rezzonico M., Romano S., Rovaris M., Sessa E., Tortorella C., Totaro R., Valentino P., Chesi, P., Marini, M. G., Mancardi, G. L., Patti, F., Alivernini, L., Bisecco, A., Borriello, G., Bucello, S., Caleri, F., Cavalla, P., Cocco, E., Cordioli, C., Di Giuseppe, M., Fantozzi, R., Gattuso, M., Granella, F., Liguori, M., Locatelli, L., Lugaresi, A., Marangoni, S., Moiola, L., Mutta, E., Neri, W., Pasto, L., Perini, P., Petruzzo, M., Plewnia, K., Repice, A. M., Rezzonico, M., Romano, S., Rovaris, M., Sessa, E., Tortorella, C., Totaro, R., and Valentino, P.
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Neurology ,Dermatology ,Burnout ,Job Satisfaction ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,Active listening ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Compassion fatigue ,Descriptive statistics ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Narrative medicine ,burnout ,compassion fatigue ,narrative medicine ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Italy ,Family medicine ,Quality of Life ,Anxiety ,Original Article ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Empathy ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Objective Aim of the research was to define the quality of life of Italian neurologists and nurses’ professional caring for multiple sclerosis, to understand their living the clinical practice and identify possible signals of compassion fatigue. Material and methods One hundred five neurologists and nurses from 30 Italian multiple sclerosis centres were involved in an online quali-quantitative survey on the organization of care, combined with the Satisfaction and Compassion Fatigue Test and a collection of narratives. Descriptive statistics of the quantitative data were integrated with the results obtained by the narrative medicine methods of analysis. Results Most of the practitioners were neurologists, 46 average years old, 69% women, 43% part time dedicated to multiple sclerosis. An increased number of patients in the last 3 years were referred in 29 centres. Differences were found between neurologists and nurses. Physicians showed higher risks of burnout, reporting intensive working paces, lack of medical personnel, and anxiety caused by the precarious employment conditions. Nurses appeared more satisfied, although the reference to the lack of spaces, and the cross professional roles risk of compassion fatigue. Both positive and negative relationships of care were depicted as influencing the professional quality of life. Conclusion The interviewed neurological teams need to limit the risk of compassion fatigue, which appeared from the first years of the career. The prevalence of the risk among neurologists suggests more awareness among scientific societies and health care managers on the risk for this category, as first step to prevent it. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1007/s10072-020-04301-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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- 2020
41. Comparing Natural History of Early and Late Onset Pediatric Multiple Sclerosis
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Ermelinda De Meo, Massimo Filippi, Maria Trojano, Giancarlo Comi, Francasco Patti, Vincenzo Brescia Morra, Giuseppe Salemi, Marco Onofrj, Giacomo Lus, Eleonora Cocco, Mattia Fonderico, Valentina Torri Clerici, Giorgia Teresa Maniscalco, Paola Valentino, Antonio Bertolotto, Alessandra Lugaresi, Roberto Bergamaschi, Marco Rovaris, Patrizia Sola, Gioacchino Tedeschi, Ilaria Pesci, Umberto Aguglia, Paola Cavalla, Davide Maimone, Franco Granella, Marika Vianello, Marta Simone, Emilio Portaccio, Maria Pia Amato, De Meo, E., Filippi, M., Trojano, M., Comi, G., Patti, F., Brescia Morra, V., Salemi, G., Onofrj, M., Lus, G., Cocco, E., Fonderico, M., Torri Clerici, V., Maniscalco, G. T., Valentino, P., Bertolotto, A., Lugaresi, A., Bergamaschi, R., Rovaris, M., Sola, P., Tedeschi, G., Pesci, I., Aguglia, U., Cavalla, P., Maimone, D., Granella, F., Vianello, M., Simone, M., Portaccio, E., Amato, M. P., De Meo, Ermelinda, Filippi, Massimo, Trojano, Maria, Comi, Giancarlo, Patti, Francasco, Brescia Morra, Vincenzo, Salemi, Giuseppe, Onofrj, Marco, Lus, Giacomo, Cocco, Eleonora, Fonderico, Mattia, Torri Clerici, Valentina, Maniscalco, Giorgia Teresa, Valentino, Paola, Bertolotto, Antonio, Lugaresi, Alessandra, Bergamaschi, Roberto, Rovaris, Marco, Sola, Patrizia, Tedeschi, Gioacchino, Pesci, Ilaria, Aguglia, Umberto, Cavalla, Paola, Maimone, Davide, Granella, Franco, Vianello, Marika, Simone, Marta, Portaccio, Emilio, Amato, Maria Pia, De Meo, E, Filippi, M, Trojano, M, Comi, G, Patti, F, Brescia Morra, V, Salemi, G, Onofrj, M, Lus, G, Cocco, E, Fonderico, M, Torri Clerici, V, Maniscalco, Gt, Valentino, P, Bertolotto, A, Lugaresi, A, Bergamaschi, R, Rovaris, M, Sola, P, Tedeschi, G, Pesci, I, Aguglia, U, Cavalla, P, Maimone, D, Granella, F, Vianello, M, Simone, M, Portaccio, E, and Amato, Mp
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Male ,Natural History of Multiple Sclerosis ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Neurology ,Recurrence ,Pediatric Multiple Sclerosis ,Disease Progression ,Humans ,Disabled Persons ,Settore MED/26 - Neurologia ,Neurology (clinical) ,Child ,Prognosis - Abstract
Objective: This study was undertaken to describe and compare disease course and prognosis of early (ie, disease onset before age 11 years) and late (ie, disease onset after age 11 years) onset pediatric multiple sclerosis. Methods: Prospectively collected clinical information from Italian Multiple Sclerosis Register of 1993 pediatric multiple sclerosis patients, of whom 172 had early onset, was analyzed. Cox models adjusted for sex, baseline Expanded Disability Status Scale score, and disease-modifying treatments and stratified for diagnostic criteria adopted (Poser vs McDonald) were used to assess the risk of reaching irreversible Expanded Disability Status Scale scores of 3, 4, and 6, and conversion to secondary progressive phenotype in early versus late onset pediatric patients. Prognostic factors were also evaluated. Results: A greater proportion of males, isolated brainstem involvement, and longer time interval between first and second clinical episode were observed in early versus late onset pediatric patients. Compared to late onset, early onset pediatric patients took longer from disease onset to convert to secondary progressive phenotype and to reach all disability milestones. Recovery from first demyelinating event, time to first relapse, annualized relapse rate during the first 3 years of disease, and disease-modifying treatment exposure were independent predictors for long-term disability in early onset pediatric patients. In late onset pediatric patients, isolated optic neuritis, multifocal symptoms, and progressive course at disease onset were additional predictors for long-term disability. Interpretation: These findings point toward the existence of a different natural history in early versus late onset pediatric multiple sclerosis patients. ANN NEUROL 2022.
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- 2022
42. The impact of PM2.5, PM10 and NO2 on Covid-19 severity in a sample of patients with multiple sclerosis: A case-control study
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Marta Ponzano, Irene Schiavetti, Roberto Bergamaschi, Enrico Pisoni, Andrea Bellavia, Giulia Mallucci, Luca Carmisciano, Matilde Inglese, Cinzia Cordioli, Girolama Alessandra Marfia, Eleonora Cocco, Paolo Immovilli, Ilaria Pesci, Cinzia Scandellari, Paola Cavalla, Marta Radaelli, Marika Vianello, Francesca Vitetta, Sara Montepietra, Maria Pia Amato, Cristina Fioretti, Massimo Filippi, Arianna Sartori, Francesca Caleri, Marinella Clerico, Antonio Gallo, Antonella Conte, Raffaella Clerici, Giovanna De Luca, Filippo Martinelli Boneschi, Roberto Cantello, Massimiliano Calabrese, Carla Tortorella, Marco Rovaris, Elena Pinuccia Verrengia, Francesco Patti, Vincenzo Brescia Morra, Marco Salvetti, and Maria Pia Sormani
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Air pollution ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,Environmental Exposure ,Pneumonia ,Settore MED/26 ,Environmental mixture ,Multiple sclerosis ,Neurology ,Case-Control Studies ,Covid-19 severity ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Many studies investigated the association between air pollution and Covid-19 severity but the only study focusing on patients with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) exclusively evaluated exposure to PM2.5. We aim to study, in a sample of MS patients, the impact of long-term exposure to PM2.5, PM10 and NO2 on Covid-19 severity, described as occurrence of pneumonia.A 1:2 ratio case-control study was designed, differentiating cases and controls based on Covid-19 pneumonia. Associations between pollutants and outcome were studied using logistic regression. Weighted quantile sum (WQS) logistic regression was used to identify the individual contribution of each pollutant within the mixture; Least Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator (LASSO) penalized regression was performed to confirm the variable selection from WQS. All the analyses were adjusted for confounders selected a priori.Of the 615 eligible patients, 491 patients provided detailed place of exposure and were included in the principal analysis. Higher concentrations of air pollutants were associated with increased odds of developing Covid-19 pneumonia (PM2.5: 3rd vs 1st tercile OR(95% CI)=2.26(1.29;3.96); PM10: 3rd vs 1st tercile OR(95% CI)=2.12(1.22;3.68); NO2: 3rd vs 1st tercile OR(95% CI)=2.12(1.21;3.69)). Pollutants were highly correlated with each other; WQS index was associated to an increased risk of pneumonia (β=0.44; p-value=0.004) and the main contributors to this association were NO2 (41%) and PM2.5 (34%). Consistently, Lasso method selected PM2.5 and NO2.Higher long-term exposure to PM2.5, PM10 and NO2 increased the odds of Covid-19 pneumonia among MS patients and the most dangerous pollutants were NO2 and PM2.5.
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- 2022
43. Effect of arm cycling and task-oriented exercises on fatigue and upper limb performance in multiple sclerosis: a randomized crossover study
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Marco Rovaris, Ambra Bisio, Elisa Gervasoni, Davide Cattaneo, Rita Bertoni, Marco Bove, and Cristina Grosso
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Adult ,Male ,030506 rehabilitation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Population ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Task (project management) ,law.invention ,Upper Extremity ,Disability Evaluation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,Aerobic exercise ,education ,Exercise ,Fatigue ,education.field_of_study ,Cross-Over Studies ,business.industry ,Multiple sclerosis ,Rehabilitation ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Crossover study ,Exercise Therapy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Finger tapping ,Upper limb ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Psychomotor Performance ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Rehabilitation treatments have been proven to be a viable way to reduce fatigue and upper limb impairments in people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS). Our aim was to examine which treatment has better short-term and carryover effects on fatigue and manual dexterity in multiple sclerosis population. Twenty PwMS participated in a 16-week randomized crossover study composed of 20 sessions. The participants were divided into two groups (group A and group B). Sessions containing combined arm cycling and task-oriented exercises were administered by a physical therapist in hospital setting. Each group received 20 sessions of aerobic training and task-oriented exercises and then an 8-week rest period or vice versa with group A receiving sessions first. Fatigue was assessed by using the Modified Fatigue Impact Scale (MFIS) and Motor Fatigability Index (MFI), which was assessed using an engineered glove during a fatiguing finger tapping task. To measure manual dexterity, the nine hole peg test (NHPT) and a rate of tapping at maximum velocity task (RATE-MV) were utilized. Treatment effects were assessed by t-test or Mann-Whitney test at the end of both periods checking for carryover effects. After treatment the combined (Groups A and B) between-period differences were MFIS: 5.2 (10.7) points, P = 0.05; MFI: -0.007 (0.001)Hz/s, P = 0.05 and RATE-MV: 0.2 (0.4) Hz/s, P = 0.05 in favor of the treatment period. No statistically significant between-period differences were found for the NHPT: 3.6 (25.0) s, P = 0.63. No carryover effects (P0.05) were observed. In conclusion, sessions of arm cycling and tailored task-oriented exercises have shown to be a viable resource for treating manual dexterity and fatigue in PwMS.
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- 2019
44. Acute Thermoregulatory and Cardiovascular Response to Submaximal Exercise in People With Multiple Sclerosis
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Elisa Gervasoni, Rita Bertoni, Denise Anastasi, Claudio Solaro, Rachele Di Giovanni, Erica Grange, Hanns-Christian Gunga, Marco Rovaris, Davide Cattaneo, Martina Anna Maggioni, and Giampiero Merati
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core body temperature ,thermoregulation ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Immunology ,Walk Test ,Walking ,Settore BIO/09 - Fisiologia ,rehabilitation ,6-minute Walk Test (6MWT) ,heart rate ,multiple sclerosis ,Exercise ,Heart Rate ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
BackgroundHeat sensitivity occurs in a high percentage of people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS), in response to environmental or exercise-induced increase in body temperature. However, the kinetic and magnitude of adaptation of the internal load and of the core body temperature (CBT) to a submaximal continuous exercise has been poorly addressed in PwMS; this may be relevant for the brief exercise bouts usually occurring in normal daily life. The aim of this work was to evaluate whether multiple sclerosis influences the acute adaptation of the internal load, the CBT and the perceptual load in response to a constant submaximal work step.MethodsCBT has been continuously monitored (0.5 Hz) by a validated wearable heat-flux sensor and electrocardiography was recorded (250 Hz) by a wearable device during a standard 6-minute walk test (6MWT) in 14 PwMS (EDSS, 4.7 ± 1.2; disease duration: 13.0 ± 10.2 years; m ± SD) and 14 age, sex and BMI-matched healthy subjects (HS). The rate of perceived exertion (RPE) of the lower limbs was assessed during the 6MWT by the Borg scale (6-20).ResultsAs expected, PwMS walked a significantly shorter distance (361 ± 98 m) than the HS group (613 ± 62 m, pConclusionThe internal load, the metabolic heat production, and the perceptive load due to a standard submaximal walking exercise seems to be preserved in PwMS, suggesting a comparable acute heat production and dissipation during exercise. Therefore, it is unlikely that the different distance achieved during the 6MWT may be caused by altered thermoregulatory responses to exercise. Rather, this appears to be a consequence of the known increased energy cost of locomotion in PwMS.
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- 2021
45. Walking With Horizontal Head Turns Is Impaired in Persons With Early-Stage Multiple Sclerosis Showing Normal Locomotion
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Ilaria Carpinella, Elisa Gervasoni, Denise Anastasi, Rachele Di Giovanni, Andrea Tacchino, Giampaolo Brichetto, Paolo Confalonieri, Claudio Solaro, Marco Rovaris, Maurizio Ferrarin, and Davide Cattaneo
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instrumented assessment ,Neurology ,dynamic balance ,wearable inertial sensors ,rehabilitation outcome assessment ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,Neurology (clinical) ,multiple sclerosis ,RC346-429 - Abstract
BackgroundTurning the head while walking (an action often required during daily living) is particularly challenging to maintain balance. It can therefore potentially reveal subtle impairments in early-stage people with multiple sclerosis who still show normal locomotion (NW-PwMS). This would help in identifying those subjects who can benefit from early preventive exercise aimed at slowing the MS-related functional decline.ObjectivesTo analyze if the assessment of walking with horizontal head turns (WHHT) through inertial sensors can discriminate between healthy subjects (HS) and NW-PwMS and between NW-PwMS subgroups. To assess if the discriminant ability of the instrumented WHHT is higher compared to clinical scores. To assess the concurrent validity of the sensor-based metrics.MethodsIn this multicenter study, 40 HS and 59 NW-PwMS [Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) ≤ 2.5, disease duration ≤ 5 years] were tested. Participants executed Item-6 of the Fullerton Advanced Balance scale-short (FAB-s) wearing three inertial sensors on the trunk and ankles. The item required to horizontally turn the head at a beat of the metronome (100 bpm) while walking. Signals of the sensors were processed to compute spatiotemporal, regularity, symmetry, dynamic stability, and trunk sway metrics descriptive of WHHT.ResultsMediolateral regularity, anteroposterior symmetry, and mediolateral stability were reduced in NW-PwMS vs. HS (p ≤ 0.001), and showed moderate discriminant ability (area under the receiver operator characteristic curve [AUC]: 0.71–0.73). AP symmetry and ML stability were reduced (p ≤ 0.026) in EDSS: 2–2.5 vs. EDSS: 0–1.5 subgroup (AUC: 0.69–0.70). The number of NW-PwMS showing at least one abnormal instrumented metric (68%) was larger (p ≤ 0.002) than the number of participants showing abnormal FAB-s-Item6 (32%) and FAB-s clinical scores (39%). EDSS: 2–2.5 subgroup included more individuals showing abnormal instrumented metrics (86%) compared to EDSS: 0–1.5 subgroup (57%). The instrumented metrics significantly correlated with FAB-s-Item6 and FAB-s scores (|Spearman's rs| ≥ 0.37, p < 0.001), thus demonstrating their concurrent validity.ConclusionThe instrumented assessment of WHHT provided valid objective metrics that discriminated, with higher sensitivity than clinical scores, between HS and NW-PwMS and between EDSS subgroups. The method is a promising tool to complement clinical evaluation, and reveal subclinical impairments in persons who can benefit from early preventive rehabilitative interventions.
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- 2021
46. A theory of mind training for people with multiple sclerosis: Development of a scale to assess the treatment acceptability
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Francesca Baglio, Marco Rovaris, Antonella Marchetti, Davide Massaro, Annalisa Valle, Alessia d’Arma, and Sonia Di Tella
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education.field_of_study ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Rehabilitation ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Applied psychology ,Theory of Mind ,rehabilitation training ,Cognition ,Sample (statistics) ,social cognition ,Settore M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Social cognition ,acceptability ,Scale (social sciences) ,Theory of mind ,medicine ,education ,Attribution ,Psychology ,General Psychology - Abstract
Among the cognitive functions affected by Multiple Sclerosis (MS) disease, recent literature has focused on Theory of Mind (ToM), the ability of recognition and the attribution of mental states to predict future behaviors. To our knowledge, despite the ToM deficit is well recognized in MS, there is no training established for the treatment in this population. For these reasons, we aimed to design and implement a ToM training to empower this social ability based on engaging material derived from cinema, and literature (cultural ToM Training - CToM). However, recent literature highlighted the importance of a rigorous methodology when a training rehabilitation program is designed, with the necessity to assess its acceptability as the first step of the implementation process. For this reason, this study aimed to evaluate the acceptability of our CToM designed for adult people with MS (PwMS). We developed two ad-hoc instruments to measure if and how our cultural training could be considered acceptable and evaluate cultural attitudes of PwMS sample. The results show that CToM training has been evaluated as very acceptable; the acceptability has proved very high also if we consider the acceptability results in the sub-factors retained by the factorial analyses. We assessed the CToM to be highly reliable at an alpha value of .85. The CToM - TAQ could be hence a useful instrument to detect the acceptability and its specific sub-components. Future works could validate our questionnaire to enlarge the availability of assessment instruments for the acceptability evaluation of a rehabilitation training program.
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- 2021
47. Indoleamine 2,3 Dioxygenase (IDO) Expression and Activity in Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis.
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Roberta Mancuso, Ambra Hernis, Simone Agostini, Marco Rovaris, Domenico Caputo, Dietmar Fuchs, and Mario Clerici
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Interferon gamma (IFN-γ) production induces the transcription of indoleamine 2,3 dioxygenase (IDO) resulting in the reduction of T-cell activation and proliferation through the depletion of tryptophan and the elicitation of Treg lymphocytes. IDO was shown to be involved in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases; we investigated whether changes in IDO gene expression and activity could be indicative of onset of relapse in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients.IDO and interferon-γ (IFN-γ) gene expression, serum IDO activity (Kynurenine/Tryptophan ratio) and serum neopterin concentration--a protein released by macrophages upon IFN-γ stimulation--were measured in 51 individuals: 36 relapsing remitting (RR)-MS patients (21 in acute phase--AMS, 15 in stable phase--SMS) and 15 healthy controls (HC). PBMCs samples in AMS patients were collected before (BT-AMS) and during glucocorticoids-based therapy (DT-AMS).IDO expression was increased and IFN-γ was decreased (p
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- 2015
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48. PML risk is the main factor driving the choice of discontinuing natalizumab in a large multiple sclerosis population: results from an Italian multicenter retrospective study
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Clara G, Chisari, Giancarlo, Comi, Massimo, Filippi, Damiano, Paolicelli, Pietro, Iaffaldano, Mauro, Zaffaroni, Vincenzo, Brescia Morra, Eleonora, Cocco, Girolama Alessandra, Marfia, Luigi Maria, Grimaldi, Matilde, Inglese, Simona, Bonavita, Alessandra, Lugaresi, Giuseppe, Salemi, Giovanna, De Luca, Salvatore, Cottone, Antonella, Conte, Patrizia, Sola, Umberto, Aguglia, Giorgia Teresa, Maniscalco, Claudio, Gasperini, Maria Teresa, Ferrò, Ilaria, Pesci, Maria Pia, Amato, Marco, Rovaris, Claudio, Solaro, Giacomo, Lus, Davide, Maimone, Roberto, Bergamaschi, Franco, Granella, Alessia, Di Sapio, Antonio, Bertolotto, Rocco, Totaro, Marika, Vianello, Paola, Cavalla, Paolo, Bellantonio, Vito, Lepore, Francesco, Patti, Simonetta, Venturi, Chisari, Clara G, Comi, Giancarlo, Filippi, Massimo, Paolicelli, Damiano, Iaffaldano, Pietro, Zaffaroni, Mauro, Brescia Morra, Vincenzo, Cocco, Eleonora, Marfia, Girolama Alessandra, Grimaldi, Luigi Maria, Inglese, Matilde, Bonavita, Simona, Lugaresi, Alessandra, Salemi, Giuseppe, De Luca, Giovanna, Cottone, Salvatore, Conte, Antonella, Sola, Patrizia, Aguglia, Umberto, Maniscalco, Giorgia Teresa, Gasperini, Claudio, Ferrò, Maria Teresa, Pesci, Ilaria, Amato, Maria Pia, Rovaris, Marco, Solaro, Claudio, Lus, Giacomo, Maimone, Davide, Bergamaschi, Roberto, Granella, Franco, Di Sapio, Alessia, Bertolotto, Antonio, Totaro, Rocco, Vianello, Marika, Cavalla, Paola, Bellantonio, Paolo, Lepore, Vito, Patti, Francesco, and DIPARTIMENTO DI SCIENZE BIOMEDICHE E NEUROMOTORIE
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Discontinuation rate ,Neurology ,Reasons for discontinuation ,Population ,Progressive Multifocal ,Relapsing-Remitting ,Settore MED/26 ,Multiple sclerosis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Natalizumab ,Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting ,Leukoencephalopathy ,Internal medicine ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Effective treatment ,Humans ,Immunologic Factors ,Multiple sclerosi ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Retrospective Studies ,education.field_of_study ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Leukoencephalopathy, Progressive Multifocal ,Multiple Sclerosis ,business.industry ,Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,Discontinuation ,Settore MED/26 - Neurologia ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
none 38 no BACKGROUND: Natalizumab (NTZ) is an effective treatment for relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). However, patients and physicians may consider discontinuing NTZ therapy due to safety or efficacy issues. The aim of our study was to evaluate the NTZ discontinuation rate and reasons of discontinuation in a large Italian population of RRMS patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The data were extracted from the Italian MS registry in May 2018 and were collected from 51,845 patients in 69 Italian multiple sclerosis centers. MS patients with at least one NTZ infusion in the period between June 1st 2012 to May 15th 2018 were included. Discontinuation rates at each time point were calculated. Reasons for NTZ discontinuation were classified as "lack of efficacy", "progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) risk" or "other". RESULTS: Out of 51,845, 5151 patients, 3019 (58.6%) females, with a mean age of 43.6 ± 10.1years (median 40), were analyzed. Out of 2037 (39.5%) who discontinued NTZ, a significantly higher percentage suspended NTZ because of PML risk compared to lack of efficacy [1682 (32.7% of 5151) vs 221 (4.3%), p
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- 2021
49. A Deficit of CEACAM-1–Expressing T Lymphocytes Supports Inflammation in Primary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis
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Federica Piancone, Mario Clerici, Laura Mendozzi, Francesca La Rosa, Ivana Marventano, Domenico Caputo, Marina Saresella, and Marco Rovaris
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Adult ,Male ,T-Lymphocytes ,Immunology ,Cell Count ,Lymphocyte Activation ,Immunophenotyping ,Proinflammatory cytokine ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,Antigen ,Antigens, CD ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Hepatitis A Virus Cellular Receptor 2 ,Inflammation ,biology ,Cell adhesion molecule ,Chemistry ,Myelin Basic Protein ,Middle Aged ,Multiple Sclerosis, Chronic Progressive ,Flow Cytometry ,Molecular biology ,Myelin basic protein ,Apoptosis ,biology.protein ,Female ,Cell Adhesion Molecules ,Intracellular ,CD8 ,Molecular Chaperones ,030215 immunology - Abstract
The immune regulatory mechanisms that modulate Th1 and Th17 immune responses are altered in multiple sclerosis (MS). The inhibitory TIM-3/Gal-9 pathway, in particular, is impaired in primary progressive MS (PPMS). Recent results showed that carcinoembryonic Ag-related cell adhesion molecule 1 (CEACAM-1), a molecule expressed on activated T lymphocytes, endows TIM-3 with inhibitory function and facilitates the maturation and cell surface expression of TIM-3. We analyzed by flow cytometry CEACAM-1 expression on myelin basic protein (MBP)–stimulated CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes of 56 MS patients with a diagnosis of either PPMS (n = 16), relapsing-remitting MS (n = 20), or benign MS (n = 20) and 40 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. The expression of TIM-3 and annexin V (AV) as well as the production of IFN-γ and the intracellular concentration of HLA-B–associated transcript 3 (Bat3), a molecular adaptor that binds the intracellular tail of TIM-3 promoting both proliferation and proinflammatory cytokine production, were analyzed as well in the same cells. Results showed the following in PPMS: 1) CD4+/CEACAM-1+, CD4+/TIM-3+, CD8+/TIM-3+, CD4+/CEACAM-1+/TIM-3+, and CD8+/CEACAM-1+/TIM-3+ T lymphocytes as well as CEACAM-1 mean fluorescence intensity on CD4+ T lymphocytes were significantly reduced; 2) apoptotic CD4+/AV+/CEACAM-1+ and CD8+/AV+/CEACAM-1+ T lymphocytes were significantly reduced; and 3) Bat3–expressing CD4+ and CD8+ T cells were significantly increased. Notably, a specular immunologic scenario was seen in benign MS. CEACAM-1 expression is reduced in PPMS; this exacerbates MBP-specific inflammatory T cell response and reduces the apoptosis of MBP-specific T lymphocytes, possibly as a consequence of the upregulation of Bat3 seen in these patients.
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- 2019
50. Physical activity in non-disabled people with early multiple sclerosis: A multicenter cross-sectional study
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Elisa Gervasoni, Denise Anastasi, Rachele Di Giovanni, Claudio Solaro, Marco Rovaris, Giampaolo Brichetto, Ilaria Carpinella, Paolo Confalonieri, Andrea Tacchino, Marco Rabuffetti, and Davide Cattaneo
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Multiple Sclerosis ,Physical activity ,Rehabilitation ,Settore MED/48 -Scienze Infermie.e Tecniche Neuro-Psichiatriche e Riabilitattive ,Walk Test ,General Medicine ,Early intervention ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Multiple sclerosis ,Exercise ,Fatigue ,Humans ,Neurology ,Settore ING-INF/06 - Bioingegneria Elettronica e Informatica ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
People with Multiple Sclerosis (PwMS) show low levels of physical activity (PA), however there has been limited research on PA in early diagnosed and no/minimally impaired (5 years, EDSS≤ 2.5) PwMS. The aims of the study were to objectively quantify PA levels in non-disabled PwMS, to compare the time spent daily at different PA levels (No activity (NPA), Light PA (LPA), Moderate PA (MPA), and Vigorous PA (VPA)) with healthy subjects (HS), and to examine the association of PA with disability, and clinical measures in PwMS.We assessed 58 PwMS (mean age±standard deviation, SD 39.1 ± 10.6years) and 20 HS (mean age±SD 39.3 ± 8.9 years). Demographic and clinical data were recorded at the hospital during the baseline assessment. Subjects wore the wrist GENEActiv accelerometer for 7-days. Data were collected at 100 Hz and summarized into a motor activity (MA) index using 60 s epochs with the following thresholds: MAPwMS show higher NPA and lower VPA compared to matched healthy subjects (NPA: Mean±SD, HS: 7.2 ± 0.9 h/day; PwMS: 8.1 ± 1.2 h/day, p0.01; VPA: HS: 0.78± 0.42 h/day; PwMS: 0.50± 0.40 h/day, p = 0.01), while no between group differences were observed for LPA and MPA (p0.05). Bivariate analysis showed that higher NPA was associated with fatigue (Fatigue Severity Scale, FSS score) in PwMS with EDSS 0-1.5 (r = 0.34, p = 0.05). In PwMS with EDSS 2-2.5, NPA was correlated with Six Minute Walk Test (6MWT, r=-0.45, p = 0.02) and CIQ (r=-0.41, p = 0.04), while VPA was more associated with FSS (R= -0.38, p = 0.06).The PA level of PwMS differs from that of healthy subjects even in early diagnosed subjects. In PwMS with EDSS 0-1.5 only, fatigue is associated to prolonged inactive behavior. Conversely, in PwMS with EDSS 2-2.5 both inactivity and vigorous activities are modulated by fatigue, endurance and associated with different level of social participation.
- Published
- 2022
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