Publications by authors named "Maria Carmela Costa"

The etiology of Multiple Sclerosis (MS) remains undetermined. Its pathogenic risk factors are thought to play a negligible role individually in the development of the disease, instead assuming a pathogenic role when they interact with each other. Unfortunately, the statistical weighting of this pathogenic role in predicting MS risk is currently elusive, preventing clinical and health insurance applications.

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We report the singular case of a 31-year-old woman who developed very serious Fluphenazine-induced parkinsonism over a few days due to a doubly incongruent drug prescription by indication and dosage having been applied to a healthy subject over one week instead of seven months. Unlike gradual drug-induced parkinsonism, our patient experienced acute extrapyramidal syndrome (EPS), reaching significant motor and sphincter disability in just a few days, followed by a gradual incomplete recovery over more than six months. In fact, after drug discontinuation, hypomimia and slight left hemi-somatic rigidity with bradykinesia remained, as well as stable non-progressive memory disturbances.

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Purpose: Outcomes of pneumatic retinopexy (PnR) using surgical microscope, wide-angle viewing system, and chandelier endoilluminator (microscope-assisted pneumatic retinopexy) for primary rhegmatogenous retinal detachment (RRD).

Methods: Retrospective study. 43 consecutive eyes with RRD undergoing microscope-assisted PnR surgery (MAPR) were analysed.

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This is a case report concerning a Natalizumab-associated Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy (PML) with cerebellar localization and wakefulness disturbances. Awakening and clinical improvement dramatically occurred as soon as the immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS) took place, being it mild in nature and colocalizing with the PML lesion. In these ideal experimental conditions, we applied brain magnetic resonance imaging post-analysis in order to know changes in brain volumes underlying the pathological process over the infection period.

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Dementia-associated compulsive singing (DACS) is a neurotransmettitorial-based behavioral disturbance, characterized by an unabating melodic expression, occurring in patients that suffer from evolved dementia. Previously described only as a "punding" aspect of the dopamine dysregulation syndrome (DDS) in the Parkinson's disease (PD), compulsive singing has now been described, for the first time, in four non-PD patients effectively treated with Haloperidol or Quetiapine. Unlike the DDS-associated conditions, in our cases DACS is not pharmacologically induced, being that all patients were L-dopa-free.

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Purpose: To assess the visual and refractive outcome of immediate intraoperative vitrectomy and intrascleral intraocular lens implantation using a "standardized" sutureless Yamane technique during cataract luxation in the vitreous chamber as a complication of phacoemulsification.

Design: A prospective, interventional, consecutive case series.

Materials And Methods: Twelve patients underwent vitrectomy and intrascleral intraocular lens fixation using a standardized Yamane technique as the primary procedure during complicated phacoemulsification.

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Indolent, non-progressive choroidal alterations can be strongly suggestive of neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) but are also rarely of unknown aetiology. A 63-year-old man presented for a routine examination. Comprehensive ophthalmological examination and retinal imaging was performed.

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