Publications by authors named "Canafoglia L"

Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCLs) are genetically heterogeneous neurodegenerative disorders, characterized by progressive cognitive and motor decline, epilepsy, visual impairment, and shortened life-expectancy. CLN6-related NCLs include both late-infantile and adult myoclonic form. We report a 21-year-old patient, with mild developmental delay, who developed occipital seizures at 14 years, and subsequently cognitive decline, cortical myoclonus, and photosensitivity at low and higher frequencies.

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Article Synopsis
  • This case report emphasizes the need for comprehensive testing methods, including video-EEG, MEG, and MRI, to accurately diagnose negative motor seizures (NMSs) and differentiate them from other conditions.
  • The study presents a 62-year-old patient with drug-resistant focal epilepsy and NMSs, highlighting the importance of monitoring that indicated specific brain activity and muscular responses during seizures.
  • Findings from the multimodal evaluations revealed an epileptic zone in the right opercular region, associated with brain abnormalities, thereby improving our understanding of NMSs and their underlying brain mechanisms.
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Myoclonus has multiple clinical manifestations and heterogeneous generators and etiologies, encompassing a spectrum of disorders and even physiological events. This paper, developed from a teaching course conducted by the Neurophysiology Commission of the Italian League against Epilepsy, aims to delineate the main types of myoclonus, identify potential underlying neurological disorders, outline diagnostic procedures, elucidate pathophysiological mechanisms, and discuss appropriate treatments. Neurophysiological techniques play a crucial role in accurately classifying myoclonic phenomena, by means of simple methods such as EEG plus polymyography (EEG + Polymyography), evoked potentials, examination of long-loop reflexes, and often more complex protocols to study intra-cortical inhibition-facilitation In clinical practice, EEG + Polymyography often represents the first step to identify myoclonus, acquire signals for off-line studies and plan the diagnostic work-up.

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Objective: The objective of this study is to report the results of the genetic analysis in a large and well-characterized population with pediatric-onset epilepsies and to identify those who could benefit from precision medicine treatments.

Methods: In this retrospective observational study, we consecutively recruited patients with pediatric-onset epilepsy observed at a tertiary neurological center over a time span of 7 years, collecting clinical and laboratory findings. Following in-depth diagnostic process to exclude possible structural and metabolic causes of the disease, patients with a suspected genetically determined etiology underwent next-generation sequencing (NGS) screening with panels for the analysis of target genes causative of epilepsy.

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Objective: This study was undertaken to assess the effectiveness/tolerability of adjunctive cenobamate, variations in the load of concomitant antiseizure medications (ASMs) and predictors of clinical response in people with focal epilepsy.

Methods: This was a retrospective study at 21 centers participating in the Italian Expanded Access Program. Effectiveness outcomes included retention and responder rates (≥50% and 100% reduction in baseline seizure frequency).

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Objective: DYNC1H1 variants are involved on a disease spectrum from neuromuscular disorders to neurodevelopmental disorders. DYNC1H1-related epilepsy has been reported in small cohorts. We dissect the electroclinical features of 34 patients harboring de novo DYNC1H1 pathogenic variants, identify subphenotypes on the DYNC1H1-related epilepsy spectrum, and compare the genotype-phenotype correlations observed in our cohort with the literature.

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Article Synopsis
  • Variants in a specific gene are linked to various types of epilepsy, including challenging forms like epilepsy of infancy and sleep-related hypermotor epilepsy.
  • A case study of a girl with drug-resistant focal seizures and developmental issues was traced to a novel genetic variant, which was found to increase neuron activity significantly.
  • Treatment with the antidepressant fluoxetine showed promising results, reducing seizures and improving behavior, hinting at its potential for treating similar epilepsy cases related to this genetic variant.
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Article Synopsis
  • * It can be classified based on its cause, distribution in the body, or the brain region involved, which helps determine observable patterns and treatment options.
  • * The review highlights myoclonus as often linked to epilepsy and aims to provide insights on its neurophysiology and classification, offering practical strategies for clinicians in diagnosis and treatment.
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The development of the cerebral cortex involves a series of dynamic events, including cell proliferation and migration, which rely on the motor protein dynein and its regulators NDE1 and NDEL1. While the loss of function in NDE1 leads to microcephaly-related malformations of cortical development (MCDs), NDEL1 variants have not been detected in MCD patients. Here, we identified two patients with pachygyria, with or without subcortical band heterotopia (SBH), carrying the same de novo somatic mosaic NDEL1 variant, p.

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Cystatin B (CSTB) is a small protease inhibitor protein being involved in cell proliferation and neuronal differentiation. Loss-of-function mutations in CSTB gene cause progressive myoclonic epilepsy 1 (EPM1). We previously demonstrated that CSTB is locally synthesized in synaptic nerve terminals from rat brain and secreted into the media, indicating its role in synaptic plasticity.

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Objective: This study aimed to explore the effectiveness of brivaracetam (BRV) according to baseline seizure frequency and past treatment history in subjects with focal epilepsy who were included in the Brivaracetam Add-On First Italian Network Study (BRIVAFIRST).

Methods: BRIVAFIRST was a 12-month retrospective, multicenter study including adults prescribed adjunctive BRV. Study outcomes included sustained seizure response (SSR), sustained seizure freedom (SSF), and the rates of treatment discontinuation and adverse events (AEs).

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Objective: There are few comparative data on the third-generation antiseizure medications (ASMs). We aimed to assess and compare the effectiveness of brivaracetam (BRV), eslicarbazepine acetate (ESL), lacosamide (LCM), and perampanel (PER) in people with epilepsy (PWE). Efficacy and tolerability were compared as secondary objectives.

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Introduction: High-density EEG (hdEEG) is a validated tool in presurgical evaluation of people with epilepsy. The aim of this national survey is to estimate diffusion and knowledge of hdEEG to develop a network among Italian epilepsy centers.

Methods: A survey of 16 items (and 15 additional items) was distributed nationwide by email to all members of the Italian League Against Epilepsy and the Italian Society of Clinical Neurophysiology.

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Missense variants of hyperpolarization-activated, cyclic nucleotide-gated (HCN) ion channels cause variable phenotypes, ranging from mild generalized epilepsy to developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE). Although variants of HCN1 are an established cause of DEE, those of HCN2 have been reported in generalized epilepsies. Here we describe the first case of DEE caused by the novel de novo heterozygous missense variant c.

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Allan-Herndon-Dudley syndrome (AHDS) is caused by mutations in the SLC16A2 gene, encoding for the monocarboxylate transporter 8 (MCT8). Central hypothyroidism and chronic peripheral thyrotoxicosis result in a severe phenotype, mainly characterized by poor growth, intellectual disability, spastic tetraparesis, and movement disorders, including paroxysmal ones (startle reaction and paroxysmal dyskinesias). Seizures are rarely reported.

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We report the clinical and EEG data of two patients harboring heterozygous mutations, who presented with typical absence seizures at 3 Hz spike and wave as well as with mild cognitive disability. Neuroradiological and other laboratory investigations were normal. Our observations suggest that mutations can be suspected in children with typical absences as the only seizure type, especially if associated with, even mild, cognitive deficits.

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Objective: Familial Adult Myoclonic Epilepsy (FAME) presents with action-activated myoclonus, often associated with epilepsy, sharing various features with Progressive Myoclonic Epilepsy (PMEs), but with slower course and limited motor disability. We aimed our study to identify measures suitable to explain the different severity of FAME2 compared to EPM1, the most common PME, and to detect the signature of the distinctive brain networks.

Methods: We analyzed the EEG-EMG coherence (CMC) during segmental motor activity and indexes of connectivity in the two patient groups, and in healthy subjects (HS).

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Variable phenotypes, including developmental encephalopathy with (DEE) or without seizures and myoclonic epilepsy and ataxia due to potassium channel mutation, are caused by pathogenetic variants in KCNC1, encoding for Kv3.1 channel subunits. In vitro, channels carrying most KCNC1 pathogenic variants display loss-of-function features.

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Background And Objectives: Heterozygous mutations or deletions of the gene are known to cause a syndrome characterized by intellectual disability, neurodevelopmental disorders, facial dysmorphisms, hypotonia, and ataxia; the latter is quite common despite in most patients brain MRI is reported to be normal. Despite the predominant neurologic involvement of -related syndrome, a systematic definition of neurologic, cognitive/behavioral, and neuroradiologic features is lacking.

Methods: We report on 6 patients (2 females and 4 males, age range 2-12 years), of whom 4 carrying a heterozygous point mutation of the gene and 2 with 10q26 deletion encompassing the gene, diagnosed at Carlo Besta Neurologic Institute of Milan, Italy.

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