7 results match your criteria: "Santa Maria alle Fonti Medical Center[Affiliation]"

Quantitative measurement of evolution of postparetic ocular synkinesis treated with botulinum toxin type A.

Plast Reconstr Surg

November 2013

Pavia, Italy From the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and the Public Health Department, University of Pavia; and the Rehabilitation Unit, Fondazione IRCCS Policlinico San Matteo; and Rehabilitation Unit, Fondazione Don Carlo Gnocchi ONLUS, "Santa Maria alle Fonti" Medical Center.

Background: The Sunnybrook Facial Grading System is considered one of the best scales available to grade facial motility and postparetic synkinesis. To measure facial landmarks and movement excursion, a new software, the Facial Assessment by Computer Evaluation, has been proposed. The aim of this study was to quantify eye synkinesis improvement after botulinum toxin type A injections using the new software and to compare this method with the Sunnybrook grading system.

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Corpus callosum agenesis and rehabilitative treatment.

Ital J Pediatr

September 2010

Rehabilitation Unit, Santa Maria alle Fonti Medical Center, Don Carlo Gnocchi ONLUS Foundation, Salice Terme (PV), Italy.

Corpus callosum agenesis is a relatively common brain malformation. It can be isolated or included in a complex alteration of brain (or sometimes even whole body) morphology. It has been associated with a number of neuropsychiatric disorders, from subtle neuropsychological deficits to Pervasive Developmental Disorders.

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Visuomotor skills are obviously important in activities of daily living. In school-aged children they are particularly important in writing and reading processes. The assessment of these skills is usually performed through neuropsychological or complex neurophysiological tests.

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Attention is an important neuropsychological function in child development. A lot of literature has been devoted to trying to separate the role of nature (i.e.

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Autism and classification systems: a study of 84 children.

Ital J Pediatr

January 2010

Rehabilitation Unit, "Santa Maria alle Fonti" Medical Center, Don Carlo Gnocchi ONLUS Foundation, Salice Terme (PV), Italy.

Background: A number of studies have shown that current classification systems (ICD 10, DSM IV TR) have limitation when applied to autistic children and the category PDD NOS (DSM IV TR) has in particular been criticized. To check the possible usefulness of other classification systems to better describe patient's functioning, we retrospectively studied 84 patients, seen consecutively in our Child Neurology and Psychiatry Department (excluding only those presenting for another disease even if with clinical signs of a PDD).

Methods: We tried to classify them according to ICD 10, DSM IV TR, CFTMEA-R, "operational classification" (Manzano and Palacio) and de Ajuriaguerra's classification.

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Child rehabilitation refusal: why it happens and possible strategies to avoid it.

Eur J Phys Rehabil Med

December 2009

Department of Rehabilitation, Santa Maria alle Fonti Medical Center, Don Carlo Gnocchi ONLUS Foundation, Salice Terme, Pavia, Italy.

Aim: Despite an obvious need for rehabilitative treatment, some parents deny consent and some others withdraw their children from a previously accepted program. There is limited literature concerning how to prevent this, serving the child's best interest, and the existing is mainly focused on legal implications.

Methods: This was a naturalistic study, carried out using data obtained during the diagnostic evaluation of 166 children (all those seen in the Child Neuropsychiatry Unit).

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Herbals and natural dietary supplements in psychiatric practice.

Recent Pat CNS Drug Discov

June 2010

Don Carlo Gnocchi ONLUS Foundation, Rehabilitation Unit, Santa Maria alle Fonti Medical Center, Viale Mangiagalli 52, 27052 Salice Terme, PV, Italy.

There is some evidence that links the increase of mental disorders' prevalence with a deterioration of Western countries' nutritional habits and it is found that the use of herbal and "natural" food supplements to treat different disorders is increasing. With factors such as chronic illness, poor health, emotional distress, and quality of life influencing the desire for complementary medicine, patients with comorbid medical and psychiatric problems seem likely to turn to this approach. We reviewed the most commonly used herbal and dietary supplements for which a certain efficacy on psychiatric symptoms or disorders has been claimed, checking current Pubmed-indexed literature (the most important being St.

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