Background: Parkinson's disease (PD) is characterized by motor and cognitive dysfunctions that can usually be treated by physiotherapy or cognitive training, respectively. The effects of consecutive physiotherapy and cognitive rehabilitation programs on PD deficits are less investigated.
Objective: We investigated the effects of 3 months of physiotherapy (physiotherapy treatment group) or consecutive physiotherapy and cognitive (physiotherapy and cognitive treatment group) rehabilitation programs on cognitive, motor, and psychological aspects in 20 PD patients.
In a recent study, we showed that tactile perception can be enhanced by applying a placebo manipulation consisting of verbal suggestion and conditioning (Fiorio et al., Neuroscience 217:96-104, 2012). Whether this change in perception is related to a better tactile functioning is still unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Pain prevalence data for patients at various stages after stroke.
Design: Repeated cross-sectional, observational epidemiological study.
Setting: Hospital-based multicenter study.
Background: Constraint-induced movement therapy (CIMT) is a rehabilitation approach for arm paresis consisting of an intensive schedule of treatment (6 h/d). The high demand of resources for CIMT is a critical issue for its implementation in the Italian health system.
Objective: To compare the effects of a reduced-intensity modified CIMT (mCIMT) program that included splinting the unaffected arm for 12 hours daily with the effects of a conventional rehabilitation program for arm paresis in patients with stroke.
Cervical dystonia (CD) is often associated with pain in the neck muscles, though the mechanisms underlying pain in this condition are still largely unknown. The aim of this study was to assess laser pain rating and CO(2) laser-evoked potentials (LEPs) in CD patients with pain in the posterior neck region. We assessed the N2/P2 LEP complex and laser pain rating in a group of 20 CD patients and in 21 normal subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mechanisms underlying pain in Parkinson's disease (PD) are unclear. Although a few studies have reported that PD patients may have low pain threshold and tolerance, none could accurately assess whether there was a correlation between sensory thresholds and demographic/clinical features of PD patients. Thus, tactile threshold, pain threshold, and pain tolerance to electrical stimuli in the hands and feet were assessed in 106 parkinsonian patients (of whom 66 reported chronic pain) and 51 age- and sex-matched healthy subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMuscular pain is the most frequent kind of nondystonic pain associated with Parkinson's disease (PD). It might be related not only to peripheral factors but also to an abnormal nociceptive input processing in the central nervous system. To test this hypothesis, we recorded CO(2) laser-evoked potentials (LEPs) in response to shoulder stimulation (skin over deltoid muscle) in 11 hemiparkinsonian PD patients complaining of muscular pain in the shoulder (ipsilateral to motor symptoms) and compared the results with those obtained in 12 pain-free PD patients with hemiparkinson and in 11 normal subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA number of patients with Parkinson's Disease (PD) complain of painful sensations that might be related not only to peripheral factors (muscle spasms, postural abnormalities) but also to an abnormal processing of nociceptive inputs in the Central Nervous System (CNS). To test this hypothesis, we recorded scalp CO(2) laser evoked potentials (LEPs) to foot skin stimulation in 11 pain-free treated PD patients affected by hemiparkinson (during the off state), in 6 pain-free drug-naïve hemiparkinsonian patients and in 11 healthy subjects. After each LEP recording, both patients and controls were asked to rate pain due to laser stimuli.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExpectation and conditioning are supposed to be the two main psychological mechanisms for inducing a placebo response. Here, we further investigate the effects of both expectation, which was induced by verbal suggestion alone, and conditioning at the level of N1 and N2-P2 components of CO2 laser-evoked potentials (LEPs) and subjective pain reports. Forty-four healthy volunteers were pseudorandomly assigned to one of three experimental groups: Group 1 was tested with verbal suggestion alone, Group 2 was tested with a conditioning procedure, whereby the intensity of painful stimulation was reduced surreptitiously, so as to make the volunteers believe that the treatment was effective, Group 3 was a control group that allowed us to rule out phenomena of sensitization and/or habituation.
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