Publications by authors named "Davide Carone"

Background: Identifying eloquent regions associated with poor outcomes based on CT perfusion (CTP) may help inform personalized decisions on selection for endovascular therapy (EVT) in patients with large vessel occlusion (LVO) ischemic stroke. This study aimed to characterize the relationship between CTP-defined hypoperfusion and National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) subitem deficits.

Methods: Patients with anterior circulation LVO, baseline CTP, itemized NIHSS at presentation and 24 hours were included.

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Article Synopsis
  • The STAIR XII workshop focused on improving neuroimaging techniques for diagnosing acute ischemic stroke, bringing together experts from academia, industry, and government to identify key priorities.
  • Ten critical areas were outlined for advancements, including enhancing imaging at stroke centers, refining clot analysis, and establishing criteria to predict treatment response.
  • Despite progress in imaging for stroke treatment, significant challenges persist, highlighting the need for collaboration among academics, industry, and regulators to enhance technologies and improve patient outcomes.
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Cerebral collaterals are recruited after arterial occlusion with a protective effect on tissue outcome in acute ischemic stroke. Head down tilt 15° (HDT15) is a simple, low cost and accessible procedure that could be applied as an emergency treatment, before recanalization therapies, with the aim to increase cerebral collateral flow. Spontaneously hypertensive rats have been shown to display anatomical differences in morphology and function of cerebral collaterals, compared to other rat strains, resulting in an overall poor collateral circulation.

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  • The study investigates how automated measures of brain health and stroke severity affect outcomes in patients treated with endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) for large vessel occlusion stroke.
  • Using data from 215 patients, the research found that brain atrophy and initial stroke severity are significant predictors of long-term outcomes, while acute ischemic volume and age are more relevant for short-term improvements.
  • The findings suggest that combining imaging analysis with clinical information can enhance predictions of patient outcomes after EVT, potentially guiding future medical decision-making.
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Neurological outcome after ischemic stroke depends on residual salvageable brain tissue at the time of recanalization. Head down tilt 15° (HDT15) was proven effective in reducing infarct size and improving functional outcome in rats with transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (t-MCAO) by increasing cerebral perfusion within the ischemic penumbra. In this pooled analysis, individual animal-level data from three experimental series were combined in a study population of 104 t-MCAO rats (45 in HDT15 group and 59 in flat position group).

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Hypothermia is a promising therapeutic strategy for severe vasospasm and other types of non-thrombotic cerebral ischemia, but its clinical application is limited by significant systemic side effects. We aimed to develop an intraventricular device for the controlled cooling of the cerebrospinal fluid, to produce a targeted hypothermia in the affected cerebral hemisphere with a minimal effect on systemic temperature. An intraventricular cooling device (acronym: V-COOL) was developed by in silico modelling, in vitro testing, and in vivo proof-of-concept application in healthy Wistar rats (n = 42).

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Objective: To assess frequency, types, and mechanisms of comorbidities in people with epilepsy and verify their association with disease features and outcome.

Methods: This cohort study was performed in 13 Italian epilepsy centers with nationwide distribution and accurate records. Eligible patients were children and adults diagnosed before December 31, 2005, and followed for a minimum of 10 years.

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Objective: To compare withdrawal of antiseizure medications (ASM) to continued treatment in newly diagnosed individuals achieving seizure freedom, and assess the risk of relapse and factors associated with relapse.

Methods: This is a multicenter retrospective cohort study with long-term follow-up. Patients with newly diagnosed epilepsy were identified from the medical records of 13 Italian epilepsy centers and followed up until the most recent visit or death.

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  • T relaxation-based MRI signals can help determine the onset time of acute ischemic strokes in patients when the exact time is unknown, highlighting the efficacy of imaging techniques in acute care settings.
  • In a study involving 35 hyperacute stroke patients, T relaxation time images showed a significant correlation with stroke duration and can effectively identify candidates within the thrombolysis treatment window.
  • The results suggest that T relaxation time ratios outperform other imaging parameters, making it a valuable tool for treatment decisions in cases of unknown stroke onset.
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Background And Objective: In hyperacute ischaemic stroke, T2 of cerebral water increases with time. Quantifying this change may be informative of the extent of tissue damage and onset time. Our objective was to develop a user-unbiased method to measure the effect of cerebral ischaemia on T2 to study stroke onset time-dependency in human acute stroke lesions.

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  • Refractory status epilepticus (RSE) affects about 30% of cardiac arrest patients after resuscitation, and its aggressive treatment’s impact on long-term brain health is unclear.
  • A study compared neurological outcomes for 166 patients based on different EEG patterns, highlighting that treatment with antiepileptic drugs and anesthetics was used for patients with RSE who had favorable prognostic indicators.
  • Results showed survival rates and good neurological outcomes were significantly better for patients with a benign EEG pattern (72.4% survival) compared to those with RSE (54.3% survival) and much lower for patients with more severe EEG patterns, suggesting aggressive treatment may be warranted in certain cases.
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Objectives: To describe the long-term prognosis of epilepsy and prognostic patterns in a large cohort of newly diagnosed patients and identify prognostic factors.

Methods: Study participants were 13 Italian epilepsy centres with accessible records dating back to 2005 or earlier, complete data on seizure outcome and treatments, precise epilepsy diagnosis, and follow-up of at least 10 years. Records were examined by trained neurology residents for demographics, seizure characteristics, neurological signs, psychiatric comorbidity, first electroencephalogram (EEG) and MRI/CT, epilepsy type and aetiology, antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), and 1-year, 2-year, 5-year and 10-year seizure remissions.

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  • Brain plasticity enables the brain to adapt and reorganize following sensory loss, such as after an amputation, leading to potential improvements in touch perception.
  • A study was conducted to assess whether temporary sensory input loss from anesthetic blocking could enhance touch perception on adjacent fingers and whether it also interacts with sensory learning through training.
  • Results indicated that the sensory deprivation improved tactile perception on neighboring fingers and significantly boosted learning effects during training, suggesting new clinical applications for enhancing sensation through sensory deprivation and learning integration.
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  • The study examines how the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) of cerebral water decreases during an acute stroke, indicating brain tissue damage and aiding treatment decisions.
  • A new method was developed to measure changes in T relaxation times in brain lesions, using unaffected areas of the opposite hemisphere as a reference for comparison.
  • Results show that T changes occur similarly in grey and white matter after a stroke, and these changes correlate with the duration of symptoms, suggesting this method could help assess the severity of brain damage in clinical settings.
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Metabolic markers of baseline brain oxygenation and tissue perfusion have an important role to play in the early identification of ischaemic tissue in acute stroke. Although well established MRI techniques exist for mapping brain perfusion, quantitative imaging of brain oxygenation is poorly served. Streamlined-qBOLD (sqBOLD) is a recently developed technique for mapping oxygenation that is well suited to the challenge of investigating acute stroke.

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Objective: To investigate neurologic outcome of patients with cardiac arrest with refractory status epilepticus (RSE) treated with a standardized aggressive protocol with antiepileptic drugs and anesthetics compared to patients with other EEG patterns.

Methods: In the prospective cohort study, 166 consecutive patients with cardiac arrest in coma were stratified according to 4 independent EEG patterns (benign, RSE, generalized periodic discharges [GPDs], malignant nonepileptiform) and multimodal prognostic indicators. Primary outcomes were survival and cerebral performance category (CPC) at 6 months.

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Background And Purpose: Lesion expansion in the week after acute stroke involves both infarct growth (IG) and anatomic distortion (AD) because of edema and hemorrhage. Enabling separate quantification would allow clinical trials targeting these distinct pathological processes. We developed an objective and automated approach to quantify these processes at 24 hours and 1 week.

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Objective: The new epilepsy definition adopted by the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) includes patients with one unprovoked seizure with a probability of further seizures, similar to the general recurrence risk after two unprovoked seizures, occurring in a 10-year period. Long-term follow-up of patients diagnosed after a single seizure is needed to assess the applicability of the new epilepsy definition in clinical practice.

Methods: Patients with newly diagnosed epilepsy were recruited retrospectively with a minimum follow-up of 10 years.

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Cerebral collaterals are dynamically recruited after arterial occlusion and highly affect tissue outcome in acute ischemic stroke. We investigated the efficacy and safety of four pathophysiologically distinct strategies for acute modulation of collateral flow (collateral therapeutics) in the rat stroke model of transient middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion. A composed randomization design was used to assign rats (n = 118) to receive phenylephrine (induced hypertension), polygeline (intravascular volume load), acetazolamide (cerebral arteriolar vasodilation), head down tilt (HDT) 15° (cerebral blood flow diversion), or no treatment, starting 30 min after MCA occlusion.

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  • The paper offers a practical guide for identifying whether individual fMRI independent components (ICs) represent structured noise or meaningful signals in brain imaging data.
  • It outlines the necessary steps for manual identification of ICs after Independent Component Analysis (ICA) decomposition, which is crucial for effective data cleaning and analysis.
  • The authors provide examples from various datasets and discuss how factors like data quality and preprocessing affect the characteristics of ICs, highlighting particularly challenging scenarios.
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High variability in infarct size is common in experimental stroke models and affects statistical power and validity of neuroprotection trials. The aim of this study was to explore cerebral collateral flow as a stratification factor for the prediction of ischemic outcome. Transient intraluminal occlusion of the middle cerebral artery was induced for 90 min in 18 Wistar rats.

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Background: Excessively long clamping time and suboptimal position of stitches can influence the anastomosis patency and the clinical outcome in cerebral bypass surgery. Coronary intravascular micro-shunts could represent an innovative solution for neurosurgical bypass, but the hemodynamic properties of these devices should be extensively studied before their translational application. We created an experimental in-vivo model and we analyzed the blood flow and pressure modification induced by the micro-shunt.

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