Publications by authors named "Mannini A"

Background & Aims: GD2, a member of the ganglioside (GS) family (sialic acid-containing glycosphingolipids), is a potential biomarker of cancer stem cells (CSC) in several tumours. However, the possible role of GD2 and its biosynthetic enzyme, GD3 synthase (GD3S), in intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA) has not been explored.

Methods: The stem-like subset of two iCCA cell lines was enriched by sphere culture (SPH) and compared to monolayer parental cells (MON).

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Good data quality is vital for personalising plans in rehabilitation. Machine learning (ML) improves prognostics but integrating it with Multiple Imputation (MImp) for dealing missingness is an unexplored field. This work aims to provide post-stroke ambulation prognosis, integrating MImp with ML, and identify the prognostic influential factors.

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In stroke survivors, persistent seizure activity could be associated with poor functional outcomes. At the same time, antiepileptic over-treatment could hamper post-stroke recovery. We systematically investigated the occurrence of seizures, the prevalence of epileptic discharges, and delta slow waves on electroencephalogram (EEG) and anti-seizure medication (ASM) management in relation to clinical manifestations and EEG abnormalities.

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Background: Diagnostic and prognostic decision-making in patients with Disorders of Consciousness (DoC) is challenging. It has been suggested that spontaneous eye blink rate is an index of patients' level of consciousness easy to detect in clinical practice. Further blinking features (i.

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Microelectrode recordings from human peripheral and cranial nerves provide a means to study both afferent and efferent axonal signals at different levels of detail, from multi- to single-unit activity. Their analysis can lead to advancements both in diagnostic and in the understanding of the genesis of neural disorders. However, most of the existing computational toolboxes for the analysis of microneurographic recordings are limited in scope or not open-source.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study explores the use of Human Amniotic Membrane (hAM) as a potential treatment for various eye conditions, showing promising effects on retinal health, particularly for issues like macular holes and retinal detachments.
  • Researchers developed a hAM extract (hAME) using a non-denaturing sonication technique and tested it on ARPE-19 cells, discovering that hAME enhances cell viability under stress and prevents harmful changes associated with epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT).
  • The findings indicate that hAME retains beneficial properties of hAM tissue and could serve as a cost-effective treatment option for retinal diseases in the future.
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Unconsciousness in severe acquired brain injury (sABI) patients occurs with different cognitive and neural profiles. Perturbational approaches, which enable the estimation of proxies for brain reorganization, have added a new avenue for investigating the non-behavioural diagnosis of consciousness. In this prospective observational study, we conducted a comparative analysis of the topological patterns of heartbeat-evoked potentials (HEP) between patients experiencing a prolonged disorder of consciousness (pDoC) and patients emerging from a minimally consciousness state (eMCS).

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  • The study aimed to differentiate between patients in a Minimally Conscious State (MCS) who show high-level behavioral responses (MCS+) and those who do not (MCS-), as this impacts treatment strategies.
  • Researchers used low-density EEG recordings to assess brain activity in 57 MCS patients, applying graph metrics to analyze connectivity across different frequency bands.
  • Results indicated that MCS- patients had less brain activity integration in the α band, while MCS- patients showed greater clustering in the δ band; machine learning models achieved a 79% accuracy in distinguishing between MCS+ and MCS-.
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A 17-year-old mare presenting with acute fever, weakness and bladder dysfunction was diagnosed with equine herpesvirus myeloencephalopathy (EHM). The mare become transiently recumbent, underwent parenteral fluid therapy, plasma infusion, steroidal/nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (SAID/NSAIDs) and bladder catheterization. After 10 days the mare was hospitalized.

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Objective: There is emerging confidence that quantitative EEG (qEEG) has the potential to inform clinical decision-making and guide individualized rehabilitation after stroke, but consensus on the best EEG biomarkers is needed for translation to clinical practice. This study investigates the spatial qEEG spectral and symmetry distribution in patients with a left/right hemispheric stroke, to evaluate their side-specific prognostic power in post-acute rehabilitation outcome.

Methods: Resting-state 19-channel EEG recordings were collected with clinical information on admission to intensive inpatient rehabilitation (within 30 days post stroke), and six months post stroke.

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  • The study evaluated how NT-proBNP concentration can predict mortality in patients with type-2 diabetes mellitus who have stabilized after an acute coronary syndrome, focusing on the effect of age.
  • It involved over 7,200 patients and found that higher NT-proBNP levels were linked to significantly increased risk of all-cause and cardiovascular death, particularly in older age groups.
  • Ultimately, the research concluded that NT-proBNP levels serve as a reliable predictor of mortality regardless of the patient's age.
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  • A study examined cognitive impairments in 49 stroke patients using the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) at three different time points: admission, discharge, and a six-month follow-up.
  • Findings revealed that while cognitive impairments decreased over time in most domains, attention and executive functions continued to improve, while issues with visuospatial and language skills increased in the long term.
  • The results underline the significance of a domain-specific approach in stroke rehabilitation, as specific cognitive domains can predict recovery and needed interventions.
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Background: The Coma Recovery Scale-Revised (CRS-R) is the most recommended clinical tool to examine the neurobehavioral condition of individuals with disorders of consciousness (DOCs). Different studies have investigated the prognostic value of the information provided by the conventional administration of the scale, while other measures derived from the scale have been proposed to improve the prognosis of DOCs. However, the heterogeneity of the data used in the different studies prevents a reliable comparison of the identified predictors and measures.

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  • Heart transplant is the best treatment for severe heart failure, and cardiac rehabilitation can enhance recovery and quality of life for these patients.
  • This study will compare traditional cardiac rehab with tele-rehabilitation in patients after heart transplant, involving 40 participants who will be monitored over time for various health metrics.
  • Researchers will analyze data to understand the safety and effectiveness of telerehabilitation and identify biological markers that can help customize treatment for individual patients.
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Consciousness can be defined as a phenomenological experience continuously evolving. Current research showed how conscious mental activity can be subdivided into a series of atomic brain states converging to a discrete spatiotemporal pattern of global neuronal firing. Using the high temporal resolution of EEG recordings in patients with a severe Acquired Brain Injury (sABI) admitted to an Intensive Rehabilitation Unit (IRU), we detected a novel endotype of consciousness from the spatiotemporal brain dynamics identified via microstate analysis.

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Background: The complexity of stroke sequelae, the heterogeneity of outcome measures and rehabilitation pathways, and the lack of extensively validated prediction models represent a challenge in predicting stroke rehabilitation outcomes.

Aim: To prospectively investigate a multidimensional set of variables collected at admission to inpatient post-stroke rehabilitation as potential predictors of the functional level at discharge.

Design: Multicentric prospective observational study.

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Injury in sports is an occurrence that prevents athletes from participating in training and competitions and has an incidence of 8.1 injuries/1000 h of practice. This translates into a cost and also into danger, especially if the event is repeated, for the health of the athlete; the injury certainly has a multifactorial causality.

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Objectives: To verify whether trunk control test (TCT) upon admission to intensive inpatient post-stroke rehabilitation, combined with other confounding variables, is independently associated with discharge mBI.

Design: Multicentric retrospective observational cohort study.

Setting: Two Italian inpatient rehabilitation units.

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Objective: The diagnosis of benign lesions of the vocal fold (BLVF) is still challenging. The analysis of the acoustic signals through the implementation of machine learning models can be a viable solution aimed at offering support for clinical diagnosis.

Materials And Methods: In this study, a support vector machine was trained and cross-validated (10-fold cross-validation) using 138 features extracted from the acoustic signals of 418 patients with polyps, nodules, oedema, and cysts.

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Brain-injured patients may enter a state of minimal or inconsistent awareness termed minimally conscious state (MCS). Such patient may (MCS+) or may not (MCS-) exhibit high-level behavioral responses, and the two groups retain two inherently different rehabilitative paths and expected outcomes. We hypothesized that brain complexity may be treated as a proxy of high-level cognition and thus could be used as a neural correlate of consciousness.

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Detecting signs of residual neural activity in patients with altered states of consciousness is a crucial issue for the customization of neurorehabilitation treatments and clinical decision-making. With this large observational prospective study, we propose an innovative approach to detect residual signs of consciousness via the assessment of the amount of autonomic information coded within the brain. The latter was estimated by computing the mutual information (MI) between preprocessed EEG and ECG signals, to be then compared across consciousness groups, together with the absolute power and an international qualitative labeling.

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The use of stereophotogrammetry systems is challenging when targeting children's gait analysis due to the time required and the need to keep physical markers in place. For this reason, marker-less photoelectric systems appear to be a solution for accurate and fast gait analysis in youth. The aim of this study is to validate a photoelectric system and its configurations (LED filter setting) on healthy children, comparing the kinematic gait parameters with those obtained from a three-dimensional stereophotogrammetry system.

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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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Objectives: The "cognitive reserve" (CR) theory posits that higher premorbid cognitive activities can mitigate the effects of brain damage. This study aimed to investigate the association between CR and long-term functional autonomy in patients surviving a severe traumatic brain injury (sTBI).

Setting: Data were collected from the database of inpatients with severe acquired brain injury in a rehabilitation unit admitted from August 2012 to May 2020.

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The inflammatory, reparative and regenerative mechanisms activated in ischemic stroke patients immediately after the event cooperate in the response to injury, in the restoration of functions and in brain remodeling even weeks after the event and can be sustained by the rehabilitation treatment. Nonetheless, patients' response to treatments is difficult to predict because of the lack of specific measurable markers of recovery, which could be complementary to clinical scales in the evaluation of patients. Considering that Extracellular Vesicles (EVs) are carriers of multiple molecules involved in the response to stroke injury, in the present study, we have identified a panel of EV-associated molecules that (i) confirm the crucial involvement of EVs in the processes that follow ischemic stroke, (ii) could possibly profile ischemic stroke patients at the beginning of the rehabilitation program, (iii) could be used in predicting patients' response to treatment.

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