Publications by authors named "Davide Cattaneo"

Background: Treadmill-based gait training is part of rehabilitation programs focused on walking abilities. The use of handrails embedded in treadmill systems is debated, and current literature only explores the issue from a behavioral perspective.

Methods: We examined the cortical correlates of treadmill walking in healthy participants using functional near-infrared spectroscopy.

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Background: People with stroke (PwST) often have significant balance limitations, making it crucial to focus rehabilitation on improving mobility and reducing the risk of falls. The Modified Dynamic Gait Index (MDGI) is recommended for measuring balance in various neurological conditions, but a minimal clinically important difference (MCID) score specific to PwST is missing.

Objectives: To calculate the MCID of the MDGI in PwST during the subacute phase.

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Reduced walking endurance is common in people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS), leading to reduced social participation and increased fall risk. This highlights the importance of identifying which gait aspects should be mostly targeted by rehabilitation to maintain/increase walking endurance in this population. A total of 56 PwMS and 24 healthy subjects (HSs) executed the 6 min walk test (6 MWT), a clinical measure of walking endurance, wearing three inertial sensors (IMUs) on their shanks and lower back.

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Background: The 2-Minute Walk Test (2MWT) is a simple and reliable test used by clinicians to assess gait function in people with stroke (pwST). No studies established the minimal clinically important difference (MCID) of the 2MWT.

Objective: To determine the MCID of the 2MWT in subacute pwST using data from a longitudinal cohort study.

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Background: To date, there has been no medication that has prevented the progression of Parkinson's disease (PD). Many benefits of intensive and multidisciplinary rehabilitation program for PD are supported by clinical, epidemiological, and experimental data. The main question is whether high-intensity motor and cognitive exercises have an effect on the disease's biological mechanisms.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Results show that lower voice intensity correlates with greater swallowing impairment, with significant data suggesting a strong risk of dysphagia when voice intensity drops below 60 dB.
  • * The findings suggest that using instrumental voice assessments is an effective, cost-efficient way to identify individuals with PD who may need further evaluation for swallowing issues, potentially reducing serious health complications.
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Background: People with Multiple Sclerosis (PwMS) often experience imbalance, gait dysfunction, and fatigue. Circuit Training (CT) can be viable for improving balance, gait, and fatigue in MS. To the author's knowledge, no studies have systematically reviewed the existing literature evaluating the effectiveness of CT in PwMS.

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Introduction: People with Parkinson's Disease (PD) show abnormal gait patterns compromising their independence and quality of life. Among all gait alterations due to PD, reduced step length, increased cadence, and decreased ground-reaction force during the loading response and push-off phases are the most common. Wearable biofeedback technologies offer the possibility to provide correlated single or multi-modal stimuli associated with specific gait events or gait performance, hence promoting subjects' awareness of their gait disturbances.

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Background And Purpose: This study aimed to investigate the factors that influence physiotherapists' decision in choosing restorative or compensatory rehabilitation during gait training in people with neurological disorders (PwNDs) and the different treatments used in the approaches.

Methods: This cross-sectional analysis used the baseline data from an observational cohort study. We analyzed data from 83 PwNDs (65 people after stroke, 5 with multiple sclerosis, and 13 with Parkinson's disease) who underwent at least 10 sessions of physiotherapy (PT) focusing on gait function.

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Individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD) are characterized by gait and balance disorders limiting their independence and quality of life. Home-based rehabilitation programs, combined with drug therapy, demonstrated to be beneficial in the daily-life activities of PD subjects. Sensorized shoes can extract balance- and gait-related data in home-based scenarios and allow clinicians to monitor subjects' activities.

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Context: Chronic Neurological Disorders (CNDs) are among the leading causes of disability worldwide, and their contribution to the overall need for rehabilitation is increasing. Therefore, the identification of new digital solutions to ensure early and continuous care is mandatory.

Objective: This protocol proposes to test the usability, acceptability, safety, and efficacy of Telerehabilitation (TR) protocols with digital and robotic tools in reducing the perceived level of disability in CNDs including Parkinson's Disease (PD), Multiple Sclerosis (MS), and post-stroke patients.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study examines how cognitive impairment affects upper limb (UL) function assessments in people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS), using various objective and subjective measures, highlighting a gap in existing research.
  • - A total of 246 PwMS were evaluated through tests like the Nine-Hole Peg Test and Box and Block Test, revealing that those with mild to moderate cognitive impairment had poorer performance on certain UL tasks compared to those without cognitive issues.
  • - Results indicate that cognitive impairment influences UL function assessment outcomes, particularly affecting the relationship between objective (e.g., Nine-Hole Peg Test) and subjective measures (e.g., MAM-36), though hand grip strength was not impacted.
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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.

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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.

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Despite their relevance in neurorehabilitation, physical therapy (PT) goals and interventions are poorly described, compromising a proper understanding of PT effectiveness in everyday clinical practice. Thus, this paper aims to describe the prevalence of PT goals and interventions in people with neurological disorders, along with the participants' clinical features, setting characteristics of the clinical units involved, and PT impact on outcome measures. A multicenter longitudinal observational study involving hospitals and rehabilitation centers across Italy has been conducted.

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Article Synopsis
  • The Berg Balance Scale (BBS) is commonly used to measure balance in individuals with Multiple Sclerosis (MS), who are at serious risk of falls.
  • This study aimed to assess the BBS's measurement properties in MS patients using Rasch analysis across a sample of 814 MS patients from three Italian rehabilitation centers.
  • The results showed that while the BBS initially did not meet certain validity criteria, adjustments allowed it to fit the Rasch model, confirming its effectiveness and revealing significant correlations with other balance measures, indicating its usefulness for evaluating balance in MS patients.
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Gait analysis is often used to study locomotor alterations in people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS), but the large number of extracted variables challenges the interpretability. In this paper, we analysed gait alterations by combining the Gait Profile Score (GPS), which summarizes kinematic locomotor deviations, and Statistical Parametric Mapping (SPM), which compares kinematics and kinetics over the whole gait cycle. Eleven PwMS and 11 speed-matched Healthy Controls (HC) underwent overground gait analysis.

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Poor dynamic balance and impaired gait adaptation to different contexts are hallmarks of people with neurological disorders (PwND), leading to difficulties in daily life and increased fall risk. Frequent assessment of dynamic balance and gait adaptability is therefore essential for monitoring the evolution of these impairments and/or the long-term effects of rehabilitation. The modified dynamic gait index (mDGI) is a validated clinical test specifically devoted to evaluating gait facets in clinical settings under a physiotherapist's supervision.

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Background: Falls can have devastating effects on quality of life. No clear relationships have been identified between clinical and stabilometric postural measures and falling in persons after stroke.

Objective: This cross-sectional study investigates the value of including stabilometric measures of sway with clinical measures of balance in models for identification of faller chronic stroke survivors, and the relations between variables.

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Dynamic balance disorders are common impairments in People with Multiple Sclerosis (PwMS) leading to gait disorders and a higher risk of falling. However, the assessment of dynamic balance is still challenging and instrumented indexes provide objective and quantitative data of CoM movement and Base of Support, which are considered that are two key factors describing dynamic balance. This study aims at validating recent instrumented indexes based on the inverted pendulum model and characterizing dynamic balance disorders in PwMS.

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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.

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Introduction: Fatigue, and balance and gait disorders can impact on physical activity (PA) levels in persons with Multiple Sclerosis (pwMS). To date, several studies have examined PA in pwMS during daily life, but little is known about PA levels in pwMS during a rehabilitation period. The present study investigated PA levels (daily steps, light physical activity (LPA), and moderate-vigorous physical activity (MVPA)) in inpatient and outpatients with MS during their rehabilitation period and described the relationship between objectively measured PA and levels of disability, quality of life, fatigue, and self-efficacy.

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Background: Although the use of Virtual Reality (VR) has received increasing interest as an add-on treatment in neurorehabilitation programs in the last fifteen years, there is scarce information about the effectiveness of fully immersive VR-based treatments on upper limb (UL) motor function in people with Multiple Sclerosis (PwMS).

Methods: In this bicentric 2-period interventional crossover study, 19 PwMS with moderate to severe disability (mean EDSS score 5.5) and relevant UL impairment underwent 12 immersive-VR sessions over a period of 4 weeks, using commercially available VR platform (Oculus Quest) and games (Fruit Ninja, Beat Saber and Creed - Rise to Glory).

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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.

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