153 results match your criteria: "National Neurological Institute C. Besta[Affiliation]"
Neurol Sci
April 2000
National Neurological Institute C. Besta, Milan, Italy.
The long-term immunological effects of azathioprine treatment have been investigated in 8 multiple sclerosis patients with different course of disease, chronic progressive (CP) or relapsing progressive (RP). We studied fluctuations in peripheral blood mononuclear cell subsets, IgG, IgM and soluble vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (sVCAM-1), before and after 2 (T24) and 3 (T36) years of therapy. We observed a significant decrease in CD8+ cells over time and a trend to lower percentage of CD3-CD56+ cells at T24 and T36.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFItal J Neurol Sci
February 1998
Department of Neurology, National Neurological Institute C. Besta, Milan, Italy.
No effective treatment is presently available for progressive multiple sclerosis (MS). Cyclophosphamide (CFX), a cytotoxic immunosuppressive drug widely used in systemic dysimmune diseases, has been proposed for the treatment of multiple sclerosis with different schedules and controversial results. To evaluate the safety and clinical efficacy of CFX, we compared three different treatment schedules in patients with progressive MS: induction followed by bimonthly boosters for one year (17 patients); bimonthly boosters for one year without previous induction (15 patients); and monthly boosters for one year (21 patients).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFItal J Neurol Sci
February 1998
Regional Centre for the Diagnosis and Cure of Headache and Craniofacial Pain, National Neurological Institute C. Besta, Milano, Italy.
This paper reviews pharmacological and other approaches currently used to treat tension-type headache (TTH), and examines aspects of the classification and pathogenesis of this common complaint. Accurate diagnosis is essential before treatment is prescribed and should involve complete history taking, thorough neurological examination and evaluation of possible associated factors. The most frequently used drugs for the acute treatment of TTH are non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) of which only some have been shown to be efficacious in placebo-controlled trials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFItal J Neurol Sci
April 1998
Department of Neurology, National Neurological Institute C. Besta, Milano, Italy.
The case of a patient who had a relapse of cerebral Whipple's disease (WD) one year after discontinuation of a two-years' antibiotic treatment is reported. Neither the clinical course nor the results of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and routine examination of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) allowed the caring physician to predict the relapse. Retrospective analysis of serial specimens of CSF showed that slight CSF leucocytosis and intrathecal synthesis of IgA might have suggested persistence of infection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFItal J Neurol Sci
April 1998
Regional Centre for the Diagnosis and Cure of Headache and Craniofacial Pain, National Neurological Institute C. Besta, Milan, Italy.
The problem concerning the treatment of pediatric headache has been the object of several recent reports. Some of the same medications used to treat adult headache problems are also utilized with children but usually at smaller dosages and in different combinations. The recent application of behavioral approaches, in particular biofeedback, for treatment of children's headaches has been an effective alternative to drugs without the problematic and dangerous side effects of pharmacological treatments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFItal J Neurol Sci
December 1998
Department of Child Neurology, National Neurological Institute C. Besta, Milan, Italy.
Infantile Huntington's disease (HD) shows a wide clinical heterogeneity. Here we describe the case of a child affected by HD who showed unusual neurological features consistent with tourettism. The absence of family history and persisting normal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) results long after the onset of symptoms delayed the diagnosis of the disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFItal J Neurol Sci
December 1998
National Neurological Institute C. Besta, Milan, Italy.
The clinical classification of autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxias (ADCAs) is intricate due to the variable and unpredictable association of signs and symptoms of central nervous system (CNS) and peripheral nervous system (PNS) deterioration during the life of a patient. However, for many purposes, particularly patient management, clinical systematics is the most useful method for labelling patients; in some instances there is no basis for any more fundamental classification of phenotypes. On the other hand, recent molecular-genetic approaches to dominant ataxias have had a profound impact in nosology, diagnostic procedures and the management of patients, since they are based on the fact that all mendelian neurological diseases can be precisely classified according to the locus involved as well as the particular mutant allele at that locus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFItal J Neurol Sci
June 1998
National Neurological Institute C. Besta, Milano, Italy.
A high prevalence of major mood disorders in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients has been reported. In this study, we investigated the frequency of previous or present major mood disorders in 65 patients with clinically definite multiple sclerosis (Poser criteria) and in 31 polyneuropathy (PNP) patients. All patients underwent a questionnaire designed after DSM-IV definitions for major mood disorders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFItal J Neurol Sci
October 1998
Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, National Neurological Institute C. Besta, Milano, Italy.
We performed electroencephalography (EEG) and multimodal evoked potential (EP) studies in 16 patients with various forms of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy (ME). The electrophysiological investigations revealed signs of involvement of the peripheral and central nervous system (CNS) in 14 patients, with a high incidence of visual-EP (VEP) alterations, indicative of visual pathway vulnerability in mitochondrial diseases. No specific pattern of abnormalities emerged and, in particular, clinical and laboratory findings did not correlate with each other.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFItal J Neurol Sci
October 1998
Department of Child Neurology, National Neurological Institute C. Besta, Milano, Italy.
Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCLs) are among the most common neurodegenerative diseases in childhood but rarely present in adulthood. The main symptoms are psychomotor deterioration, visual failure, epilepsy and motor disturbances. The NCLs are morphologically characterized by the accumulation of lipopigments within numerous cell types and loss of neurons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStem Cells
September 2000
Laboratory of Neuropharmacology, National Neurological Institute C. Besta, Milan, Italy.
We have recently isolated stem cells deriving from the olfactory bulbs of adult patients undergoing particularly invasive neurosurgery. After improving our experimental conditions, we have now obtained neural stem cells according to clonal analysis. The cells can be expanded, established in continuous cell lines and differentiated into the three classical neuronal phenotypes (neurons, astrocytes, and oligodendrocytes).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFItal J Neurol Sci
April 1999
Department of Neurosurgery, National Neurological Institute "C. Besta", Via Celoria 11, I-20133 Milano, Italy.
Ital J Neurol Sci
April 1999
Third Neurological Division and Headache Centre, National Neurological Institute "C. Besta", Via Celoria 11, I-20133 Milano, Italy.
Ital J Neurol Sci
April 1999
Third Neurological Division and Headache Centre, National Neurological Institute "C.Besta", Via Celoria 11, I-20133 Milano, Italy.
Ital J Neurol Sci
April 1999
Third Neurological Division and Headache Centre, National Neurological Institute "C. Besta", Via Celoria 11, I-20133 Milano, Italy.
Dev Neurosci
April 2000
Laboratory of Neuropharmacology, National Neurological Institute 'C. Besta', Milan, Italy.
The generation of diverse types of neural cells during development occurs through the progressive restriction of the fate potential of neuroepithelial progenitor cells. This process is controlled by factors intrinsic and extrinsic to the cell. While the effect of extrinsic cues on multipotent stem cells of the murine central nervous system (CNS) is becoming clearer, little is known of neural stem cells of human origin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Neurol
January 2000
Department of Neurology, National Neurological Institute C Besta, Milan, Italy.
Twenty-two of 29 patients with chronic sensory ataxic neuropathy showed T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging high signal intensity in the posterior columns of the cervical spine. T2 changes reflected the degeneration of central sensory projections and localized the disease process to T-shaped dorsal root ganglion neurons. No similar abnormalities were found in sensory and sensorimotor length-dependent axonal neuropathy patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Neurol Scand
June 1999
National Neurological Institute C. Besta, Milano, Italy.
Objectives: Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) may determine memory difficulties not explained by episodic memory impairment. The present study was aimed to verify the presence of specific semantic memory dysfunctions in TLE and to explore their relations to epilepsy variables.
Subjects And Methods: Forty-seven patients with lateralized temporal (n = 26) or extra-temporal lobe epilepsy (n = 21) and 23 healthy subjects were compared.
J Clin Invest
November 1999
Department of Neuromuscular Diseases, National Neurological Institute "C. Besta," 20133 Milan, Italy.
The mucosal administration of the native antigen or peptide fragments corresponding to immunodominant regions is effective in preventing or treating several T cell-dependent models of autoimmune disease. No data are yet available on oral tolerance with immunodominant T-cell peptides in experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis (EAMG), an animal model of B cell-dependent disease. We report that oral administration of the T-cell epitope alpha146-162 of the Torpedo californica acetylcholine receptor (TAChR) alpha-subunit suppressed T-cell responses to AChR and ameliorated the disease in C57Bl/6 (B6) mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHum Mutat
November 1999
Department of Neuromuscular Diseases, National Neurological Institute "C. Besta", Milan, Italy.
Myotonia congenita (MC) is a genetic disease characterized by mutations in the CLCN1 gene (OMIM*118425) encoding the skeletal muscle voltage-gated chloride channel (ClC-1). Autosomal dominant and recessive forms are observed, characterized by impaired muscle relaxation after forceful contraction (myotonia), which is more pronounced after inactivity and improves with exercise. We report three novel and one known mutations of the CLCN1 gene in four unrelated MC families.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurotrauma
August 1999
National Neurological Institute C. Besta, Milan, Italy.
In this work, we show that the embryonic human brain contains multipotent central nervous system (CNS) stem cells, which may provide a continuous, standardized source of human neurons that could virtually eliminate the use of primary human fetal brain tissue for intracerebral transplantation. Multipotential stem cells can be isolated from the developing human CNS in a reproducible fashion and can be exponentially expanded for longer than 2 years. This allows for the establishment of continuous, nontransformed neural cell lines, which can be frozen and banked.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry
September 1999
Department of Neurology, National Neurological Institute C. Besta, Milano, Italy.
Objectives: to evaluate quality of life in patients with malignant brain tumour with stable disease after combined treatments in comparison to patients with other chronic neurological conditions, and to explore the relation of quality of life to clinical, pathological, affective and cognitive factors.
Methods: fifty seven patients who were stable after surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy and 24 controls with spastic paraparesis, peripheral neuropathies, myasthenia, ataxia, Parkinson's disease, or multiple sclerosis, were studied. Patients were evaluated by functional living index-cancer, Karnofsky performance status, activity of daily living, self-rating depression scale, state-trait anxiety inventory, and tests for cognitive abilities.
Brain Pathol
July 1999
Laboratory of Neuropharmacology, National Neurological Institute C. Besta, Milan, Italy.
The study of the basic physiology of the neural precursors generated during brain development is driven by two inextricably linked goals. First, such knowledge is instrumental to our understanding of how the high degree of cellular complexity of the mature central nervous system (CNS) is generated, and how to dissect the steps of proliferation, fate commitment, and differentiation that lead early pluripotent neural progenitors to give rise to mature CNS cells. Second, it is hoped that the isolation, propagation, and manipulation of brain precursors and, particularly, of multipotent neural stem cells (NSCs), will lead to therapeutic applications in neurological disorders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Pathol
July 1999
Department of Experimental Neurophysiology and Epileptology, National Neurological Institute C. Besta, Milan, Italy.
In the present report we describe the neuropathological characteristics of tissue surgically resected from three patients affected by intractable epilepsy secondary to cortical dysplasia. Common features, suggestive of a focal cortical dysplasia of Taylor, were observed in all specimens. Immunocytochemical procedures were performed using neuronal and glial markers and the sections were observed at light traditional and confocal microscopes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To study the influence of epileptogenic lesions on learning and memory alterations in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE).
Methods: We studied 131 patients (55 with left and 39 with right lesional TLE; 22 with left and 15 with right cryptogenic TLE) and 36 healthy subjects. We compared these groups by using a battery of tests to assess verbal and visual learning, delayed recall, and recall after the imposition of interfering activity.