219 research outputs found

    MRI correlates of Parkinson's disease progression: A voxel based morphometry study

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    We investigated structural brain differences between a group of early-mild PD patients at different phases of the disease and healthy subjects using voxel-based morphometry (VBM). 20 mild PD patients compared to 15 healthy at baseline and after 2 years of follow-up. VBM is a fully automated technique, which allows the identification of regional differences in the gray matter enabling an objective analysis of the whole brain between groups of subjects. With respect to controls, PD patients exhibited decreased GM volumes in right putamen and right parietal cortex. After 2 years of disease, the same patients confirmed GM loss in the putamen and parietal cortex; a significant difference was also observed in the area of pedunculopontine nucleus (PPN) and in the mesencephalic locomotor region (MLR). PD is associated with brain morphological changes in cortical and subcortical structures. The first regions to be affected in PD seem to be the parietal cortex and the putamen. A third structure that undergoes atrophy is the part of the inferior-posterior midbrain, attributable to the PPN and MLR. Our findings provide new insight into the brain involvement in PD and could contribute to a better understanding of the sequence of events occurring in these patients

    Eight weddings and six funerals: An fMRI study on autobiographical memories

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    \u201cAutobiographical memory\u201d (AM) refers to remote memories from one's own life. Previous neuroimaging studies have highlighted that voluntary retrieval processes from AM involve different forms of memory and cognitive functions. Thus, a complex and widespread brain functional network has been found to support AM. The present functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study used a multivariate approach to determine whether neural activity within the AM circuit would recognize memories of real autobiographical events, and to evaluate individual differences in the recruitment of this network. Fourteen right-handed females took part in the study. During scanning, subjects were presented with sentences representing a detail of a highly emotional real event (positive or negative) and were asked to indicate whether the sentence described something that had or had not really happened to them. Group analysis showed a set of cortical areas able to discriminate the truthfulness of the recalled events: medial prefrontal cortex, posterior cingulate/retrosplenial cortex, precuneus, bilateral angular, superior frontal gyri, and early visual cortical areas. Single-subject results showed that the decoding occurred at different time points. No differences were found between recalling a positive or a negative event. Our results show that the entire AM network is engaged in monitoring the veracity of AMs. This process is not affected by the emotional valence of the experience but rather by individual differences in cognitive strategies used to retrieve AMs

    Precision-based exercise as a new therapeutic option for children and adolescents with haematological malignancies

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    Children and adolescents with haematological malignancies (pedHM) are characterized by a severe loss of exercise ability during cancer treatment, lasting throughout their lives once healed and impacting their social inclusion prospects. The investigation of the effect of a precision-based exercise program on the connections between systems of the body in pedHM patients is the new frontier in clinical exercise physiology. This study is aimed at evaluating the effects of 11 weeks (3 times weekly) of combined training (cardiorespiratory, resistance, balance and flexibility) on the exercise intolerance in PedHM patients. Two-hundred twenty-six PedHM patients were recruited (47% F). High or medium frequency participation (HAd and MAd) was considered when a participant joined; > 65% or between 30% and < 64% of training sessions, respectively. The \u201cup and down stairs\u2019\u2019 test (TUDS), \u201c6 min walking\u201d test (6MWT), the \u201c5 Repetition Maximum strength\u201d leg extension and arm lateral raise test (5RM-LE and 5RM-ALR), flexibility (stand and reach), and balance (stabilometry), were performed and evaluated before and after training. The TUDS, the 5RM-LE and 5RM-ALR, and the flexibility exercises showed an increase in HAd and MAd groups (P < 0.05), while the 6MWT and balance tests showed improvement only in HAd group (P < 0.0001). these results support the ever\u2010growing theory that, in the case of the treatment of PedHM, \u2018exercise is medicine\u2019 and it has the potential to increase the patient\u2019s chances of social inclusion

    Neural correlates of anosognosia in Alzheimer\u2019s disease and mild cognitive impairment: A multi-method assessment

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    Patients with Alzheimer\u2019s Disease (AD) and Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) may present anosognosia for their cognitive deficits. Three different methods have been usually used to measure anosognosia in patients with AD and MCI, but no studies have established if they share similar neuroanatomical correlates. The purpose of this study was to investigate if anosognosia scores obtained with the three most commonly used methods to assess anosognosia relate to focal atrophy in AD and MCI patients, in order to improve understanding of the neural basis of anosognosia in dementia. Anosognosia was evaluated in 27 patients (15 MCI and 12 AD) through clinical rating (Clinical Insight Rating Scale, CIRS), patient-informant discrepancy (Anosognosia Questionnaire Dementia, AQ-D), and performance discrepancy on different cognitive domains (self-appraisal discrepancies, SADs). Voxel-based morphometry correlational analyses were performed on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data with each anosognosia score. Increasing anosognosia on any anosognosia measurement (CIRS, AQ-D, SADs) was associated with increasing gray matter atrophy in the medial temporal lobe including the right hippocampus. Our results support a unitary mechanism of anosognosia in AD and MCI, in which medial temporal lobes play a key role, irrespectively of the assessment method used. This is in accordance with models suggesting that anosognosia in AD is primarily caused by a decline in mnemonic processes

    Ballonnen in zee = balloons as marine litter

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    Releasing balloons seems harmless. However, remains of balloons, especially valves and ribbons are becoming a common and persistent type of marine litter found on beaches. Following Dutch Queens day 2007, large numbers of Dutch balloons were found in Normandy, France. Animals may become entangled in ribbons or ingest the materials. Even though balloon rubber quickly disintegrates, remains are found in 1-2% of stomachs of Northern Fulmars beached in the North Sea area. ChildrenÂżs contests, releasing balloons with name tags, are not the real problem, especially if no plastic valves and short, degradable ribbons are used. However, the vast majority of balloons released is meant for company advertising and provide just a very short moment of joy followed by a nuisance in the marine environment. environmentally friendly companies may want to reconsider such activities in future

    Centrotemporal spikes during NREM sleep: The promoting action of thalamus revealed by simultaneous EEG and fMRI coregistration

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    Benign childhood epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes (BECTS) has been investigated through EEG\u2013fMRI with the aim of localizing the generators of the epileptic activity, revealing, in most cases, the activation of the sensory\u2013motor cortex ipsilateral to the centrotemporal spikes (CTS). In this case report, we investigated the brain circuits hemodynamically involved by CTS recorded during wakefulness and sleep in one boy with CTS and a language disorder but without epilepsy. For this purpose, the patient underwent EEG\u2013fMRI coregistration. During the \u201cawake session\u201d, fMRI analysis of right-sided CTS showed increments of BOLD signal in the bilateral sensory\u2013motor cortex. During the \u201csleep session\u201d, BOLD increments related to right-sided CTS were observed in a widespread bilateral cortical\u2013subcortical network involving the thalamus, basal ganglia, sensory\u2013motor cortex, perisylvian cortex, and cerebellum. In this patient, who fulfilled neither the diagnostic criteria for BECTS nor that for electrical status epilepticus in sleep (ESES), the transition from wakefulness to sleep was related to the involvement of a widespread cortical\u2013subcortical network related to CTS. In particular, the involvement of a thalamic\u2013perisylvian neural network similar to the one previously observed in patients with ESES suggests a common sleep-related network dysfunction even in cases with milder phenotypes without seizures. This finding, if confirmed in a larger cohort of patients, could have relevant therapeutic implication

    Does spatial locative comprehension predict landmark-based navigation?

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    In the present study we investigated the role of spatial locative comprehension in learning and retrieving pathways when landmarks were available and when they were absent in a sample of typically developing 6- to 11-year-old children. Our results show that the more proficient children are in understanding spatial locatives the more they are able to learn pathways, retrieve them after a delay and represent them on a map when landmarks are present in the environment. These findings suggest that spatial language is crucial when individuals rely on sequences of landmarks to drive their navigation towards a given goal but that it is not involved when navigational representations based on the geometrical shape of the environment or the coding of body movements are sufficient for memorizing and recalling short pathways

    Macchine del Tempo/Time Machines Concept per la realizzazione di una grande mostra INAF nella cittĂ  di Roma

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    La Mostra “Macchine del Tempo/Time Machines” sarà inaugurata a fine 2023, si chiuderà a Primavera del 2024 e verrà ospitata nel secondo piano del Palazzo delle Esposizioni di Roma, in Via Nazionale, gestito dall’Azienda Speciale Palaexpo, una partecipata del Comune di Roma, con cui sarà siglata una specifica convenzione. Il progetto ha un duplice obiettivo, da un lato realizzare una mostra pop che parli a tutti e che metta al centro l’Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica, le sue persone e le sue ricerche, dall’altro dar vita a qualcosa di unico, che faccia parlare di sé e che incentivi il pubblico a informarsi sulle tematiche affrontate per ampliare il proprio sapere e conoscere INAF e i suoi osservatori distribuiti sul territorio italiano. Un percorso che vuole giocare tra il vecchio e il nuovo, con uno stile anni ’80, ma con contenuti che parlano dell’oggi e del domani e che usa il gioco come meccanismo per suscitare interesse ed emozione positiva. Le “Macchine del Tempo” sono strumenti dell’ingegno italiano, frutto della ricerca condotta negli osservatori dell’Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica dalle donne e dagli uomini che ogni giorno mettono impegno e passione per portare le conoscenze umane sempre più distanti. Questa mostra vuole diffondere la conoscenza attuale facendo però vedere chi c’è “dietro l’oculare”. Un’esperienza immersiva che comincia da noi stessi e subito passa a Galileo, l’italiano che - inventando il cannocchiale - posò l’occhio sulla nostra prima “macchina del tempo”. Sarà importante realizzare un catalogo della mostra e sono stati avviati contatti per rendere l’esposizione fruibile al pubblico in modo quanto più possibile inclusivo. Nel corso del periodo in cui sarà visitabile la mostra saranno organizzati incontri scientifici di alto livello, con nomi di primo piano della Ricerca astrofisica e spaziale mondiale, ma anche aperitivi scientifici più informali, durante i quali i cittadini potranno conversare direttamente con i ricercatori. Verranno proposti dei progetti di public engagement che utilizzano format nuovi come il Poetry Slam abbinato a uno stage scientifico o rassegne cinematografiche che propongono film nei quali sono presenti strutturei INAF. Si intende inoltre realizzare uno show per planetario, in collaborazione con il Planetario di Roma, sul tema “Macchine del Tempo”, da programmare in un periodo vicino a quello della della mostra e da diffondere in seguito, anche sotto forma di film per planetario, sia in italiano che in altre lingue, per la fruizione da parte di un pubblico internazionale. La mostra “Macchine del Tempo” ha per INAF molteplici aspetti di ritorno in campo sociale, comunicativo e relazionale. La mostra vuole stimolare le giovani generazioni allo studio di materie STEM, ma con “contaminazioni” anche di altre discipline non solo scientifiche. Questo determinerà in futuro per INAF anche la possibilità di avere giovani risorse da inserire nell’organico di ricerca. L’astrofisica italiana è un'eccellenza internazionalmente riconosciuta e deve essere maggiormente valorizzata anche in Italia, per potenziare l’immagine che INAF trasmette ai cittadini, alle istituzioni e agli stakeholders, attraverso i finanziamenti pubblici rivolti alla ricerca, incentivando ad esempio le collaborazioni, o anche le donazioni, con altre realtà pubbliche o private. Questa mostra vuole essere un mezzo per offrire alle scuole del territorio, e non solo, la possibilità di accedere a un patrimonio culturale che unisce scienza, tecnologia e storia. Un patrimonio davvero unico nel suo genere. L’ambizione è di riuscire a realizzare un contenitore di eventi e di dibattiti che ruotino attorno ai temi più attuali dell’astrofisica, ma che non temono e che anzi cercano forti legami con l’arte tutta, dal teatro alla pittura, dalla musica alla letteratura
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