Publications by authors named "P Sarti"

Background: Alzheimer's disease and mild cognitive impairment are often difficult to differentiate due to their progressive nature and overlapping symptoms. The lack of reliable biomarkers further complicates early diagnosis. As the global population ages, the incidence of cognitive disorders increases, making the need for accurate diagnosis critical.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the long-term psychosocial impacts of cancer treatments like cisplatin and carboplatin on pediatric patients, emphasizing the need to explore sex differences in neuropsychological outcomes.
  • Using structured assessments, researchers evaluated executive functions and psychosocial factors in pediatric cancer survivors, discovering that males performed better than females in key cognitive areas.
  • The results underline the importance of understanding these sex-specific cognitive differences to create tailored interventions, suggesting future research should involve larger groups and longer-term studies.
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Background: Music Therapy (MT) is a non-pharmacological, art-based intervention that employs music experiences within a therapeutic alliance to attend to clients' physical, emotional, cognitive, and social requirements. This is the first study aiming at investigating the impact of MT on the psychological facets of children suffering from cancer.

Methods: The study, combining the AQR and m-YPAS assessment tools, evaluated behavioral, sound-musical, and interactive parameters in pediatric oncology patients undergoing MT sessions during hospitalization.

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Animals, including humans, learn and remember to avoid a novel food when its ingestion is followed, hours later, by sickness - a phenomenon initially identified during World War II as a potential means of pest control. In the 1960s, John Garcia (for whom the effect is now named) demonstrated that this form of conditioned taste aversion had broader implications, showing that it is a rapid but long-lasting taste-specific food aversion with a fundamental role in the evolution of behaviour. From the mid-1970s onward, the principles of the Garcia effect were translated to humans, showing its role in different clinical conditions (e.

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