Publications by authors named "Mirta Fiorio"

Article Synopsis
  • The study examines the placebo effect, specifically how an active placebo that mimics drug side effects can influence feelings of sadness, especially when presented in a positive light.
  • Ninety-six participants were divided into three groups to test the effectiveness of placebos with positive framing versus standard information and a control group, using self-reported measures of sadness.
  • Results indicated that both placebo groups reported less sadness than the control, with the positive framing group maintaining lower sadness levels after six hours, but positive framing did not improve tolerability of side effects.*
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Background And Aims: Functional motor disorders (FMD) present a prevalent, yet misunderstood spectrum of neurological conditions characterized by abnormal movements (i.e., functional limb weakness, tremor, dystonia, gait impairments), leading to substantial disability and diminished quality of life.

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Article Synopsis
  • Functional gait disorders (FGDs) are a type of neurological condition that impact high-level control of walking, and they were studied using dual-task methods to explore their effects.
  • Researchers analyzed gait patterns in 87 patients with FGDs compared to 48 healthy individuals, focusing on how different tasks (like cognitive challenges) affected their walking.
  • Key findings included that longer duration of FGDs was linked to worse walking, while some improvements were noted in specific visual task conditions, suggesting the potential for using gait characteristics as important diagnostic tools for FGDs.
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Aim Of Study: We aimed to compare knowledge, opinions, and clinical experiences among Czech, Slovak, and Italian neurologists to identify potential educational gaps and unify understanding.

Clinical Rationale For Study: Functional neurological disorder (FND) is a disabling condition characterised by motor, sensory, or cognitive symptoms which are incompatible with other neurological disorders. Novel diagnostic and treatment approaches have improved FND management.

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The present study explores whether a particular style of placebo disclosure could serve as a tool to foster a renewed trust in one's own inherent resources and elicit a meaningful placebo effect. In a motor performance task, two placebo groups received inert transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) in each of four sessions along with information on its force-enhancing properties. Before the final session, one of the placebo groups was informed about the placebo, which was portrayed as a means to unleash an inherent potential.

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Background: Motor symptoms in functional motor disorders (FMDs) refer to involuntary, but learned, altered movement patterns associated with aberrant self-focus, sense of agency, and belief/expectations. These conditions commonly lead to impaired posture control, raising the likelihood of falls and disability. Utilizing visual and cognitive tasks to manipulate attentional focus, virtual reality (VR) integrated with posturography is a promising tool for exploring postural control disorders.

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Negative emotional stimuli can strongly bias attention, particularly in individuals with high levels of dispositional negative affect (NA). The current study investigated whether the prefrontal cortex (PFC), a brain region involved in the top-down regulation of emotional processing, plays a different role in controlling attention to emotions, depending on the individual NA. Sham and anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) was delivered over the right or left PFC while assessing attentional bias (AB) to emotions (happy, angry, sad faces) in individuals with higher and lower trait NA.

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Introduction: Functional neurological disorder (FND) presents motor, sensory, and cognitive symptoms characterized by clinical signs incongruent with known neurological disease. Together with other health professionals, like neurologists, psychiatrists can play an essential role in diagnosing and managing these disorders. Hence, understanding their opinion and clinical experience with FND is of utmost importance to catch potential educational needs and improve healthcare services for patients.

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The ability to perform two tasks simultaneously is essential for daily activities. In older adults, this ability is markedly reduced, as evidenced by the dual-task cost on gait. Preliminary evidences indicate that the dual-task cost can be influenced by different types of manipulations.

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Introduction: Functional gait disorders (FGDs) are disabling symptoms of Functional Motor Disorders. Clinical observations show improvement with distraction suggesting an association with higher-level control mechanisms. Dual tasking is a valuable tool for exploring the interplay between gait and cognition.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigated how nonlitigant, non-compensation-seeking patients with functional motor disorder (FMD) performed on three performance validity tests (PVTs) compared to healthy individuals and those simulating illness.
  • Results indicated low failure rates on the Coin in the Hand Test and Rey 15-Item Test for FMD patients, aligning closely with healthy controls, but distinct from healthy simulators.
  • The findings suggest that these three PVTs effectively differentiate between genuine patients and those simulating symptoms, supporting their use in clinical assessments.
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The placebo effect is a powerful psychobiological phenomenon whereby a positive outcome follows the administration of an inert treatment thought to be effective. Growing evidence shows that the placebo effect extends beyond the healing context, affecting also motor performance. Here we explored the placebo effect on the control of goal-directed movement, a fundamental function in many daily activities.

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Functional neurological disorder (FND) is characterized by neurological symptoms that cannot be explained by a structural neurological cause. Among the different aetiological models that have been proposed for FND, of note is the Bayesian predictive coding model, which posits that perception relies on top-down cortical predictions (priors) to infer the source of incoming sensory information. This model can also apply to non-pathological experiences, such as placebo and nocebo effects, wherein sensory information is shaped by prior expectations and learning.

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Background: Despite mounting evidence for the powerful influence of smell and taste substances in experimental pain, our knowledge of their effects in the clinical context is scarce, especially for patients with chronic oral burning pain. To fill this gap, we investigated the effect of olfactory and gustatory stimuli on pain perception in patients with chronic oral burning pain, a disabling condition that is difficult to manage and treat.

Methods: Twenty-two patients with chronic oral burning pain underwent testing with a variety of olfactory and gustatory substances (pleasant, neutral, unpleasant) in multisensory interaction.

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Physical exercise has an impact in biasing attention to positive or negative emotional stimuli. While attentional shift to emotions varies with age, evidence is lacking on the effect of prolonged endurance exercise on age-related attentional bias to emotions. This study aims at filling this knowledge gap, by applying a dot-probe task to measure attentional bias to emotions before and after a half-marathon in healthy participants of different ages (age range 21-65 years).

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Non-invasive brain stimulation (NIBS) techniques are used in clinical and cognitive neuroscience to induce a mild magnetic or electric field in the brain to modulate behavior and cortical activation. Despite the great body of literature demonstrating promising results, unexpected or even paradoxical outcomes are sometimes observed. This might be due either to technical and methodological issues (e.

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Background: Functional neurological disorders (FND) are disabling medical conditions commonly seen in neurological practice. Neurologists play an essential role in managing FND, from establishing a diagnosis to coordination of multidisciplinary team-based treatment for patients. With this study, we investigated the knowledge and the clinical experience of Italian neurologists in managing patients with FND.

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Voluntary actions are accompanied by the experience of controlling one's own movements (sense of agency) and the feeling that the moving body part belongs to one's self (sense of body ownership). So far, agency and body ownership have been investigated separately, leaving the neural underpinnings of the relation between the two largely unexplored. The aim of this study was to explore the causal role of two multisensory brain regions, that is the premotor cortex (PMc) and the cerebellum, in agency and body ownership concurrently on the same behavioral task, i.

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Background: Functional motor disorders (FMD) are highly disabling neurological conditions in which postural control deficits increase the risk of falls and disability in performing daily living activities. Scattered evidence suggests that such disturbances may depend on abnormal attentional focus and might improve with distraction.

Research Question: How do motor and cognitive dual tasks performed under two different sensory conditions shape postural control in patients with FMD.

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Introduction: We tested the hypothesis that functional limb weakness is associated with possible dysfunction of the central processing of proprioceptive information, by evaluating the amount of tonic vibration reflex (TVR) and the perception of the TVR movement.

Methods: The study sample was 20 patients with functional weakness of the lower and/or the upper limbs and 25 healthy controls; delivery of 92-Hz transcutaneous vibration of the biceps brachii tendon of the unrestrained arm stimulated predominantly the muscle spindle afferent and elicited elbow flexion (tonic vibration reflex, TVR). Blindfolded participants had to match the final position of the vibrated arm with their contralateral tracking arm.

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The clinical effects of the Covid-19 pandemic are now the subject of numerous studies worldwide. But what are the effects of the quarantine imposed by the states that implemented the measures of lockdown? The present research aims to explore, in a preliminary way, the major stress-related symptoms during the lockdown, due to Covid-19, in the Italian population. Subjects were asked to fill out a survey, that traced a line identifying the most relevant psychophysiological symptoms that took into account factors such as perceived stress, body perception, perceived pain, quality of sleep, perceptive variations (i.

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Article Synopsis
  • Our sensory systems, especially pain perception, are crucial for survival, acting as protective mechanisms against harmful stimuli and sometimes indicating illness or disease.
  • There's an increasing interest in using smell and taste as methods to help manage pain, since these senses are connected to emotions and cognitive processes, but their interactions with pain haven't been thoroughly studied yet.
  • Current research shows that smells may impact pain intensity and unpleasantness, while tastes might affect pain threshold and tolerance; however, more studies are needed to cement these findings and explore new pain relief options.
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Motor learning is a key component of human motor functions. Repeated practice is essential to gain proficiency over time but may induce fatigue. The aim of this study was to determine whether motor performance and motor learning (as assessed with the serial reaction time task, SRTT) and perceived fatigability (as assessed with subjective scales) are improved after two types of placebo interventions (motor and cognitive).

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General practitioners (GPs) provide primary care and advise their patients on which diagnostic and therapeutic pathways they judge most appropriate. For patients with functional neurological disorders (FND), receiving a proper explanation of diagnosis by their GP from the very beginning may drastically improve prognosis. Novel approaches to the diagnosis and treatment of FND have important implications for effective management.

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