Publications by authors named "S Passero"

Clinical assessment and management of sleep disturbances in patients with mild cognitive impairment and dementia has important clinical and social implications. Poor sleep results in an increased risk of morbidities and mortality in demented patients and is a source of stress for caregivers. Sleep disturbances show high prevalence in mild cognitive impairment and dementia patients and they are often associated one to another in the same patient.

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Background/aims: Sleep disturbances are common in the elderly and in persons with cognitive decline. The aim of this study was to describe frequency and characteristics of insomnia, excessive daytime sleepiness, sleep-disordered breathing, REM behavior disorder and restless legs syndrome in a large cohort of persons with mild cognitive impairment or dementia.

Methods: 431 consecutive patients were enrolled in 10 Italian neurological centers: 204 had Alzheimer's disease, 138 mild cognitive impairment, 43 vascular dementia, 25 frontotemporal dementia and 21 Lewy body dementia or Parkinson's disease dementia.

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Objectives: Antiplatelet therapy (APT) promotes bleeding; therefore, APT might worsen outcome in patients with intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis to address the hypothesis that pre-ICH APT use is associated with mortality and poor functional outcome following ICH.

Methods: The Medline and Embase databases were searched in February 2008 using relevant key words, limited to human studies in the English language.

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Increases in plasma concentrations of total homocysteine (tHcy) have recently been reported in multiple sclerosis (MS) as the alteration of the methionine cycle for the onset of autoimmune diseases. Homocysteine (Hcy) and cysteine (Cys) are generated by the methionine cycle and transsulfuration reactions. Their plasma levels are subjected to complex redox changes by oxidation and thiol/disulfide (SH/SS) exchange reactions regulated by albumin.

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Background: The investigation of a wide set of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS)-related variables in both hemispheres might help to identify a pattern of cortical excitability changes in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) patients, reflecting gamma-amino-butiric acid (GABA)/glutamate balance and dysfunction, and to determine whether some of these variables are related to clinical features.

Methods: In 20 drug-naive PTSD patients without comorbidity and 16 matched healthy control subjects we tested bilaterally with standard TMS procedures: resting motor threshold (RMT) to single-pulse TMS (reflecting ion channel function), paired-pulse short-latency intracortical inhibition (SICI; mainly reflecting GABA(A) function) and intracortical facilitation (ICF; mainly reflecting glutamatergic function), single-pulse cortical silent period (CSP; mainly reflecting GABA(B)-ergic function), and paired-pulse short-latency afferent inhibition (SAI; reflecting cholinergic mechanisms and their presynaptic GABA(A)-mediated modulation).

Results: The PTSD patients showed widespread impairment of GABA(A)-ergic SICI, which was reversed toward facilitation in both hemispheres in one-half of the patients, marked increase of glutamatergic ICF in the right hemisphere, and right-sided impairment of SAI.

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