Publications by authors named "ANDREIUOLO P"

Background/aims: The diagnosis of mild or questionable Alzheimer's disease (AD) depends on clinical criteria that often leave a margin for doubt. We aim to verify the diagnostic accuracy of amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) and AD with proton spectroscopy (1H-MRS) combined with brief cognitive-functional scales.

Methods: The relationship between 1H-MRS of the posterior cingulate cortex and the cognitive performance in Mini Mental State Examination, Blessed-Roth Dementia Rating and Functional Assessment Staging of Alzheimer Disease scales were investigated in 25 AD, 10 aMCI and 33 normal control (NC) individuals.

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Experimental studies in nonhuman primates have questioned the selectivity of pyramidal tract damage in giving rise to the classical pyramidal syndrome in humans, characterized by permanent spastic hemiplegia (PSH). According to this view, concomitant injury of extrapyramidal pathways is necessary for the development of both hemiplegia and spasticity. In this study we used conventional magnetic resonance imaging and diffusion tensor imaging tractography to characterize the anatomical correlates of PSH in a patient with a rare and discrete unilateral lesion of the medullary pyramid.

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Callosal dysgenesis (CD) is observed in many neurodevelopmental conditions, but its subjacent mechanisms are unknown, despite extensive research on animals. Here we employ magnetic resonance diffusion tensor imaging and tractography in human CD to reveal the aberrant circuitry of these brains. We searched particularly for evidence of plasticity.

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The trail making test (TMT) pertains to a family of tests that tap the ability to alternate between cognitive categories. However, the value of the TMT as a localizing instrument remains elusive. Here we report the results of a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study of a verbal adaptation of the TMT (vTMT).

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Humans are endowed with a natural sense of fairness that permeates social perceptions and interactions. This moral stance is so ubiquitous that we may not notice it as a fundamental component of daily decision making and in the workings of many legal, political, and social systems. Emotion plays a pivotal role in moral experience by assigning human values to events, objects, and actions.

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Objective: To study the pattern of cerebral activation related to the performance of tool-use pantomimes with functional MRI (fMRI) using a task-subtraction design.

Background: Tool use comprises a particular category of transitive actions. Inability to pantomime the use of tools has been classically associated with retrorolandic dominant hemisphere damage.

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The present paper reports the results of a fMRI subtraction study of the pattern of cortical activation induced by an ideational praxis paradigm in six normal right-handed subjects. The control task consisted of a sequence of complex meaningless hand movements. A complete study was done for each hand in each subject.

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Article Synopsis
  • A 43-year-old man with diabetes and hypertension experienced unusual painful sensations in his left toes due to an incomplete form of Dejerine-Roussy syndrome, a neurological condition.
  • When lying down, he felt as if his toes were twisting painfully, a sensation relieved by standing up or applying pressure to his foot.
  • MRI revealed damage in the thalamus affecting sensory processing, leading to a disconnect in sensory input and proprioception, demonstrating how specific brain injuries can impact bodily sensations and perceptions.
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  • The tegmentum of the midbrain contains vital systems related to both local circuits and long-distance communication within the brain, affecting how we function.
  • A 67-year-old man experienced a central tegmental hemorrhage that initially led doctors to mistakenly diagnose him as being in a coma because he showed signs like ptosis and lack of speech.
  • Over time, he regained some responsiveness and mobility, highlighting that some patients might be awake but misinterpreted as being in a coma due to their symptoms.
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A 64-year-old man presented with pathologic crying and right hemiplegia due to a unilateral pontine infarct from probable branch disease of the basilar artery. The circumscribed nature of the lesion was supported by MRI and short-latency evoked potentials. The weeping spells ceased after a few days of imipramine in low doses.

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