Publications by authors named "Morocutti C"

We report a case of a 53-year-old man with a 2-year history of progressive gait and balance disturbance, supranuclear ophthalmoparesis, mild dysarthria and dysmetria. EMG revealed a lower limb axonal sensory-motor neuropathy, while MR imaging demonstrated a small focal lesion in the right frontal lobe, mild diffuse hyperintensity of the periventricular white matter and diffuse brain atrophy. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy revealed a mild decrease in N-acetyl-aspartate peak and an increase in the choline peak in the small right frontal lesion and within 6 voxels of interest in normal appearing cerebral tissue.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We report a brief discussion on a clinical case of a female patient, 85 years old, affected by severe cognitive impairment and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The patient was not taking drugs at home (apart from promazine: 10 drops when necessary to control her behavioral diseases). A previous neuropsychological evaluation had shown a severe cognitive impairment MMSE=16/30; ADL=3/6; IADL=0/8) due to multiple brain ischemic areas (confirmed in 2003 by MRI neuroimaging).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An epidemiological survey of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) was conducted in Molise, a central-southern region of Italy, from March 1998 to June 2000. Fifty-eight cases of CMT in 13 unrelated families were identified within the selected area. The prevalence of all subtypes of CMT was 17.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We investigated the integrity of the ascending pathways for pain sensitivity in the early stage of type 1 diabetes mellitus, by measuring the N1 component and the conventional N2/P2 vertex potentials of laser evoked potentials (LEPs). Brain responses to laser stimuli were obtained in 21 healthy volunteers and 21 type 1 diabetic patients, without either clinical neuropathy or electrophysiological evidence of large-fiber damage. In diabetic patients N1 and P2 latencies were prolonged and the N1 and N2/P2 amplitudes were decreased after foot stimulation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Hereditary Spastic Paraplegias (HSPs) are heterogeneous neurodegenerative disorders whose etiopathogenesis is still unclear. The identification of pathogenic mutations in a gene (SPG7) encoding a mitochondrial metalloprotease suggested that oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) alterations might underlie HSP in a subgroup of patients. We performed clinical, morphological, biochemical, and molecular genetic studies in six HSP patients and in six sporadic patients to investigate OXPHOS in muscle biopsies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The DEFECT11 syndrome is a contiguous gene syndrome associated with deletions in the proximal part of chromosome 11p. In this study, we describe in an Italian family the co-existence of multiple exostoses (EXT) and enlarged parietal foramina (FPP), the two major symptoms of this syndrome, with abnormalities of the central nervous system. The latter may be a yet undescribed feature of DEFECT11 syndrome.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To study pupillary autonomic function in multiple sclerosis (MS), we examined 36 subjects with low disability, preserved visual acuity and no recent history (2 years) of optic neuritis or actual visual complaints. Compared to controls, MS patients showed a greater dilatator reaction with darkness and, for the light reflex, a lower amplitude and contraction rate and a greater recovery of pupillary diameter 5 s after the stimulus. Within the MS group, no difference was found comparing patients with or without the following characteristics: nuclear magnetic resonance imaging evidence of midbrain lesions; increased visual evoked potential P100 latency; and a previous history of optic neuritis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background And Purpose: The results of a large prospective randomized trial have shown the efficacy of oral anticoagulation in the secondary prevention of major vascular events in patients with nonrheumatic atrial fibrillation (NRAF); less well established is the role of antiplatelet agents. The present study compared the effects of indobufen, a reversible inhibitor of platelet cyclooxygenase, with those of warfarin in this setting.

Methods: A total of 916 patients with NRAF and a recent (< or = 15 days) cerebral ischemic episode were admitted to this multicenter, randomized study, during which they were treated with either indobufen (100 or 200 mg BID) or warfarin (to obtain an international normalized ratio of 2.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We report on two Italian families with an early-adult onset autosomal dominant disorder, characterized by leukoencephalopathy, migraine, psychiatric disturbances, stroke and dementia. These findings fulfill the diagnostic criteria for cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL) syndrome. Moreover, to confirm the CADASIL gene location to 19p12, we performed a linkage analysis with four microsatellite markers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The authors have observed a 33-year-old woman with a 3-year history of a clinical syndrome characterised by atrophy of the musculature of the left foot and leg with impaired motor function, associated with a paracentral cortical oligodendroglioma located in the right parietal region. Clinical, neuroradiological (MRI), electrophysiological (electromyography: EMG; motor evoked potential: MEP; median and tibial somatosensory evoked potential: m-SEP and t-SEP), and neuropsychological studies were performed every year for three years. Neurological examination showed an abnormal gait along with foot drop, pes cavus and pyramidal involvement.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Trinucleotide repeat expansion has been found in 64 subjects from 19 families: 57 patients with SCA1 and 7 subjects predicted, by haplotype analysis, to carry the mutation. Comparison with a large set of normal chromosomes shows two distinct distributions, with a much wider variation among expanded chromosomes. The sex of transmitting parent plays a major role in the size distribution of expanded alleles, those with > 54 repeats being transmitted by affected fathers exclusively.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Non-valvular atrial fibrillation increases the risk of stroke by a factor of 5 and is present in about 15% of patients with acute stroke. Its prevalence in the general population increases from 0.5% at 50-59 years to > 10% at 80-99 years.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Spermiograms were performed in two young patients with cerebellar ataxia, one familial and the other sporadic. The subjects did not have endocrine abnormalities, but there was MRI evidence of cerebellar atrophy. Light and electron microscope examination revealed sperm abnormalities similar to those described in Purkinje cell degeneration (PCD).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The occurrence of muscular pathologies in AZT treated subjects has been evaluated in 67 HIV seropositive outpatients (56 AZT-treated and 11 untreated controls) in a neurological clinical and paraclinical follow-up study. Standard electromyographic and electrodiagnostic examinations, together with muscle enzyme determination, were performed in every subject, and periodically repeated at fixed intervals; in 11 patients a muscle biopsy sample was also obtained. An AZT-related myopathy was diagnosed in 8 biopsied cases; 9 more patients were considered to have AZT myopathy on clinical, EMG and ex juvantibus criteria.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A longitudinal clinical neurological and electrophysiological follow-up study was carried out on 31 HIV1 seropositive outpatients in the asymptomatic or LAS stages of the infection (CDC II-III). The results of clinical examination and multimodal evoked potentials (EP) recording showed a high percentage of abnormalities (42% and 39% of cases respectively); in a statistically significant number of subjects these abnormalities were predictive of subsequent immunological deterioration, thus demonstrating the close relationship between neurological and immunological functions in HIV1 infection.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

One hundred-twenty nine HIV-1 seropositive patients (39 females, 90 males) were studied by means of pattern visual evoked potential (VEP) and brainstem auditory evoked potential (BAEP) recording. Utilizing the criteria of the Centers for Disease Control the patients were clinically defined and then subdivided into four groups: group A included patients of category II (n:11); group B patients of category III (n:29); group C patients of category IVa and IVc2 (n:55) and group D patients belonging to the other subgroups of category IV (n:34). EP were altered in 26.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Six families with SCA1 were studied. The clinical data on 35 patients are reported. Cerebellar and pyramidal system involvement was invariably found in association with brainstem, spinal cord and/or peripheral nervous system disorders.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A family with late-onset autosomal dominant pure cerebellar ataxia was studied both neurologically and genetically. Neuroimaging and electrophysiological results were in agreement with the clinical evidence showing involvement of the cerebellar system only, even many years after onset. No atrophy of inferior olives was observed by magnetic resonance imaging, while cerebellar atrophy was extremely marked.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Histochemical, electron microscopy and biochemical studies were performed on muscle biopsy specimens from 11 AIDS patients treated with zidovudine. A peculiar association of structural abnormalities and mitochondrial dysfunction was found. Focal cytochrome c oxidase (COX) deficiency was evident in muscle sections from 9 patients, 8 of whom had received long-term treatment while one had been treated for 1 month only.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The pattern electroretinogram (PERG) was recorded at different contrast levels (96%, 71%, 47%) in 10 Parkinson's disease patients before and during dopaminergic monotherapy. The data were compared to a control group of 8 normal subjects recorded with the same procedure. PERG P50 latency progressively increased as contrast was decreased both in normal subjects and patients; however, this trend was much more pronounced in PD patients without therapy; consequently in this group the difference between P50 latency obtained with 96% and 47% contrast was statistically significant (P = 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF