31 results match your criteria: "Biomedicine and Movement Sciences University of Verona[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • - The study aimed to compare the effects of rectus femoris diagnostic motor nerve blocks (DNB) and botulinum toxin (BoNT-A) injections on unilateral stiff-knee gait in multiple sclerosis patients.
  • - Fourteen stable multiple sclerosis patients were assessed before and after interventions, with tests measuring walking ability and disability status, revealing that DNB results helped predict improvements from BoNT-A.
  • - Findings indicated that DNB could be particularly useful for patients with lower functional status, as it effectively forecasted improvements in endurance and walking speed, especially with botulinum treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This paper describes the scientific figure of Roger Sperry as a maverick researcher, an original thinker who arrived at definitive notions about the working of the brain mostly by distancing himself from the prevalent views of his peers. After solving the riddle of the functions of the corpus callosum, he won a Nobel prize in physiology or medicine for identifying the different cognitive abilities of the disconnected right and left hemispheres of the human brain. He could have won another Nobel prize for his work on the prenatal formation of behavioral neuronal networks and their growth and development after birth.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction/purpose: To determine the location of the rectus femoris (RF) motor branch nerve, as well as its coordinates with reference to anatomical and ultrasound landmarks.

Methods: Thirty chronic stroke patients with stiff knee gait (SKG) and RF hyperactivity were included. The motor nerve branch to the RF muscle was identified medially to the vertical line from anterior superior iliac spine and the midpoint of the superior margin of the patella (line AP) and vertically to the horizontal line from the femoral pulse and its intersection point with the line AP (line F).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Restless legs syndrome (RLS) is a complex sensorimotor disorder occurring with a typical circadian fashion. Association with additional features, like alexithymia and nocturnal compulsive behaviors further complicates the framework.

Objectives: To assess interoception in RLS.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Software-based measurements of axial postural abnormalities in Parkinson's disease (PD) are the gold standard but may be time-consuming and not always feasible in clinical practice. An automatic and reliable software to accurately obtain real-time spine flexion angles according to the recently proposed consensus-based criteria would be a useful tool for both research and clinical practice.

Objective: We aimed to develop and validate a new software based on Deep Neural Networks to perform automatic measures of PD axial postural abnormalities.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: There is no consensus with regard to the nosology and cut-off values for postural abnormalities in parkinsonism.

Objective: To reach a consensus regarding the nosology and cut-off values.

Methods: Using a modified Delphi panel method, multiple rounds of questionnaires were conducted by movement disorder experts to define nosology and cut-offs of postural abnormalities.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Biallelic loss-of-function variants have hitherto been linked to mitochondrial complex I deficiency presenting with heterogeneous clinical and radiological features in nine cases only.

Objectives: To fully characterize, both phenotypically and genotypically, -related mitochondrial disease.

Methods: We collected data from cases identified by screening genetic databases of several laboratories worldwide and systematically reviewed the literature.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The differentiation of functional dystonia from idiopathic dystonia may be clinically challenging.

Objective: To identify clinical features suggestive of functional dystonia to guide physicians to distinguish functional dystonia from idiopathic dystonia.

Methods: Patient data were extracted from the Italian Registry of Functional Motor Disorders and the Italian Registry of Adult Dystonia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Statin treatment has been associated with necrotizing autoimmune myopathy and has been linked to myasthenia gravis. We present an unprecedented clinical challenge with both disorders occurring in a patient treated with statins few months earlier.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Isolated REM sleep behaviour disorder (RBD) is an early-stage α-synucleinopathy in most, if not all, affected subjects. Detection of pathological α-synuclein in peripheral tissues of patients with isolated RBD may identify those progressing to Parkinson's disease, dementia with Lewy bodies or multiple system atrophy, with the ultimate goal of testing preventive therapies. Real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC) provided evidence of α-synuclein seeding activity in CSF and olfactory mucosa of patients with α-synucleinopathies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Neurophysiological markers in dystonia have so far not been sistematically applied in clinical practice due to limited reproducibility of results and low correlations with clinical findings. Exceptions might be represented by the blink reflex (BR), including its recovery cycle (BRRC) and the trigemino-cervical reflex (TCR) which, compared to other neurophysiological methods, have shown more consistent alterations in cervical dystonia (CD). However, a comparison between the two techniques, and their possible correlation with disease symptoms, have not been thoroughly investigated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Progress in genetics - particularly the advent of next-generation sequencing (NGS) - has enabled an unparalleled gene discovery and revealed unmatched complexity of genotype-phenotype correlations in movement disorders. Among other things, it has emerged that mutations in one and the same gene can cause multiple, often markedly different phenotypes. Consequently, movement disorder specialists have increasingly experienced challenges in clinicogenetic correlations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Spinal cord injury and vascular function: evidence from diameter-matched vessels.

J Appl Physiol (1985)

March 2021

Division of Geriatrics, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah.

The effect of a spinal cord injury (SCI) on vascular function has been clouded by both the physiological and mathematical bias of assessing vasodilation in arteries with differing diameters both above and below the lesion and when comparing with healthy, nondisabled controls (CTRL). Thus, we measured vascular function, with flow-mediated vasodilation (FMD), in 10 SCI and 10 CTRL with all arteries matched for diameter (≈0.5 cm): brachial artery (BA, arm, functional limb in both groups) and popliteal artery (PA, leg, disused limb in SCI, functional limb in CTRL).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Functional motor disorders (FMDs) are abnormal movements that are significantly altered by distractive maneuvers and are incongruent with movement disorders seen in typical neurological diseases.

Objective: The objectives of this article are to (1) describe the clinical manifestations of FMDs, including nonmotor symptoms and occurrence of other functional neurological disorders (FND); and (2) to report the frequency of isolated and combined FMDs and their relationship with demographic and clinical variables.

Methods: For this multicenter, observational study, we enrolled consecutive outpatients with a definite diagnosis of FMDs attending 25 tertiary movement disorders centers in Italy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Effects of 1-Hz rTMS on Emotional Behavior and Dendritic Complexity of Mature and Newly Generated Dentate Gyrus Neurons in Male Mice.

Int J Environ Res Public Health

June 2020

Department of Medical Sciences, Neurology and Psychiatry, Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine, Seton Hall University, Nutley, NJ 07110, USA.

Low-frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (1-Hz rTMS) is a promising noninvasive tool for the treatment of depression. Hippocampal neuronal plasticity is thought to play a pivotal role in the pathophysiology of depressive disorders and the mechanism of action of antidepressant treatments. We investigated the effect of 1-Hz rTMS treatment on hippocampal dentate gyrus structural plasticity and related emotional behaviors modifications.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Stiff-limb syndrome is part of stiff person spectrum, presenting with fluctuating gait disorders attributed to leg stiffness, spasms, and posturing. It could also manifest with anxiety and specific phobias such as pseudoagoraphobia. We aimed to describe the importance of specific gait phobia as a diagnostic clue to anti-glutamic acid decarboxylase stiff-limb syndrome.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: The overall frequency of postural abnormalities (PA) in Parkinson's disease (PD) is unknown. We evaluated the overall prevalence of PA and assessed the association with demographic and clinical variables.

Methods: For this multicenter, cross-sectional study, consecutive PD outpatients attending 7 tertiary Italian centers were enrolled.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The role of sympathetic and parasympathetic activity in relation to the repetitive exposure to static stretching (SS) on heart and musculoskeletal hemodynamics in stretched and resting muscles is still a matter of debate. The aim of the study was to determine cardiac and musculoskeletal hemodynamics to repetitive bouts of unilateral SS. Sympathetic and parasympathetic activity contribution to the central hemodynamics and local difference in circulation of stretched and resting muscles were also investigated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We present a methodology called biological morphogenetic surgery (BMS) that can recover (enlarge or reduce) the shape/volume of anatomic structures/tissues affected by congenital or acquired malformations based on a minimally invasive procedure. This emerges as a new concept in which the main task of surgery is the biological modulation of different remodeling and repair mechanisms. When applied, for example, to a tuberous breast deformity, the "enlarging BMS" expands the retracted tissue surrounding the gland through a cutting tip of a needle being inserted through small incisions percutaneously, accounting for the biological activity of the grafted fat.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Probable dysimmune epilepsia partialis continua manifesting as epileptic moving toes syndrome: electroclinical features of a challenging case.

Epileptic Disord

August 2018

Department of Neurology, Christian Doppler Klinik, Paracelsus Medical University, Salzburg Austria, Centre for Cognitive Neuroscience Salzburg, Austria, Department of Public Health Technology Assessment, UMIT - University for Health Sciences, Medical Informatics and Technology, Hall.i.T., Austria.

Epilepsia partialis continua (EPC) is a rare form of focal status epilepticus. We describe a 22-year-old woman with EPC manifesting with isolated toe movements, prevalent over the left side and initially misdiagnosed as psychogenic, clinically almost indistinguishable from those observed in "painful legs and moving toes syndrome". The continuous involuntary movements with EMG correlates of twitches lasting <100 ms, the sharp waves over fronto-central regions on EEG, and the marked asymmetry in somatosensory evoked potentials with higher cortical amplitude over the right side following peripheral stimulation over the left foot confirmed the epileptic nature of the symptoms, leading to the diagnosis of EPC.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF