28 research outputs found

    Internet Gaming Disorder in Children and Adolescents with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder

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    Although Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) has been related to an increased risk for behavioral addictions, the relationship between ADHD and Internet Gaming Disorder (IGD) is still debated. The aim of this study is to address this topic by exploring the prevalence of IGD in a consecutive sample of ADHD youth, compared to a normal control group, and by assessing selected psychopathological and cognitive features in ADHD patients with and without IGD. One hundred and eight patients with ADHD (mean age 11.7 ± 2.6 years, 96 males) and 147 normal controls (NC) (mean age 13.9 ± 3.0 years, 114 males) were included in the study and received structured measures for IGD. In the ADHD group, 44% of the sample were above the IGD cut-off, compared to 9.5% in the NC group. ADHD patients with IGD presented with greater severity and impairment, more severe ADHD symptomatology, more internalizing symptoms, particularly withdrawal/depression and socialization problems, and more prominence of addiction and evasion dimensions. A binary logistic regression showed that the degree of inattention presented a greater weight in determining IGD. These findings may be helpful for identifying, among ADHD patients, those at higher risk for developing a superimposed IGD

    Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD): A Case Report and Brief Review of Recent Literature

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    Neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS) is a rare, life-threatening, idiosyncratic adverse reaction to antipsychotic drugs. Despite the increasing rates in the prescription of antipsychotics in pediatric patients with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), little is known about the occurrence and hallmarks of NMS in this specific population. NMS appears to be part of the larger catatonia domain, based on the frequent relationship between ASD and catatonia, on the shared, when not overlapping, clinical features with malignant catatonia, and on the effectiveness of catatonia treatments on the NMS/MC symptoms. The intrinsic difficulties of exploring NMS in ASD in controlled studies accounts for the subsequent lack of available information. Based on recent reports and on our case report, clinical features of NMS in the pediatric ASD population appear to be the same as the non-ASD population. Further studies are needed to confirm these results

    Experience in Designing and Evaluating a Teleconsultation System Supporting Shared Care of Oncological Patients

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    This poster presents our experience in designing, developing and deploying a Web-based Teleconsultation System based on a Patient Centred Oncological Electronic Medical Record (PEMR) specifically designed to provide clinicians a cooperative work tool supporting the oncological patient management. An evaluation phase in a clinical setting was performed when the system was deployed in the hospitals. A second evaluation phase after two year of utilization has been carrying on

    De Novo 1q21.3q22 Duplication Revaluation in a “Cold” Complex Neuropsychiatric Case with Syndromic Intellectual Disability

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    Syndromic intellectual disability often obtains a genetic diagnosis due to the combination of first and next generation sequencing techniques, although their interpretation may require revaluation over the years. Here we report on a composite neuropsychiatric case whose phenotype includes moderate intellectual disability, spastic paraparesis, movement disorder, and bipolar disorder, harboring a 1.802 Mb de novo 1q21.3q22 duplication. The role of this duplication has been reconsidered in the light of negativity of many other genetic exams, and of the possible pathogenic role of many genes included in this duplication, potentially configuring a contiguous gene-duplication syndrome

    Lithium treatment in bipolar adolescents: a follow-up naturalistic study

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    Background: Although lithium is currently approved for the treatment of bipolar disorders in youth, long term data, are still scant. The aim of this study was to describe the safety and efficacy of lithium in referred bipolar adolescents, who were followed up at the 4th (T1) and 8th (T2) month of treatment. Methods: The design was naturalistic and retrospective, based on a clinical database, including 30 patients (18 males, mean age 14.2±2.1 years). Results: Mean blood level of lithium was 0.69±0.20 mEq/L at T1 and 0.70±0.18 mEq/L at T2. Both Clinical Global Impression-Severity (CGI-S) and Children Global Assessment Scale (C-GAS) scores improved from baseline (CGI-S 5.7±0.5, C-GAS 35.1±3.7) to T1 (CGI-S 4.2±0.70, C-GAS 46.4±6.5; P<0.001), without significant differences from T1 to T2. Thyroid-stimulating hormone significantly increased from 2.16±1.8 mU/mL at baseline to 3.9±2.7 mU/mL at T2, remaining within the normal range, without changes in T3/T4 levels; two patients needed a thyroid hormone supplementation. Creatinine blood level did not change. No cardiac symptoms and electrocardiogram QTc changes occurred. White blood cell count significantly increased from 6.93±1.68 103/mmc at baseline to 7.94±1.94 103/mmc at T2, and serum calcium significantly increased from 9.68±0.3 mg/dL at baseline to 9.97±0.29 mg/dL at T2, both remaining within the normal range; all the other electrolyte levels were stable and normal during the follow-up. The treatment with lithium was well tolerated, probably due to the relatively low lithium blood levels. Gastrointestinal symptoms (16.7%), sedation (9.7%) and tremor (6.4%) were the most frequently reported side effects. Conclusion: Lithium was effective and safe in adolescent bipolar patients followed-up for eight months

    Design and implementation of a regional tele-oncology project: design and initial implementation phase

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    In 1997 two tele-oncology projects started in the north of Italy (Province of Trento). The common aim of the projects concerns the design and the implementation of a non-surgical tele-oncology system intended to provide a suitable and flexible computing environment for a joint management of oncology patient on a WAN. The network designed for the first project (funded by Italian Health Ministry) links 5 rural hospitals of the province -lacking of oncology specialists on site- to the central one, where clinical oncology (CO) and radiotherapy services are provided. The specific purpose of the tele-oncology system is to support the rural hospitals oncology care by providing continuos expert remote advice from central site oncology specialists in formulating treatment plans and conducting follow-up sessions. The second project (funded by EC Adapt-bis Programme) is devoted to facilitate the communication between general practitioners (GPs) and the medical staff at the CO department of Trento through a computer network, allowing GPs and hospital specialists to share medical data. To satisfy the overall needs of the two projects an intranet-based OTCS was implemented. The basic component of the system is the multimedia digital medical record. A distributed relational database will allow users to store and retrieve medical records, accessed by a dedicated Web browser. The system incorporates Web-based applications (native and custom) such as synchronized navigation on medical records, image-sharing, audio-conferencing, white-boarding, local notepad, chat and e-mail service. The system provides a synchronous mode for real-time cooperative working between hospital specialists and an asynchronous mode for sharing clinical data between GPs and hospital specialists. Users acceptance during the prototype implementation periods and the training phase was high. Since summer 1999 the OTCS has been deployed in hospital and GPs setting and it is going to be tested in the hospital routin

    Internet Gaming Disorder in Children and Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorder and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder

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    Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have been related to an increased risk for behavioral addictions including online gaming. However, the relationship between these two conditions and Internet gaming disorder (IGD) is still debated. The aim of this study is to address this topic by exploring the prevalence of IGD in a consecutive sample of ASD youth and ADHD youth, compared with a normal control group, and by assessing selected psychopathological and neuropsychological features in ASD and ADHD patients with and without IGD. This study included 77 ASD patients (67 males, mean age 13.58 ± 2.75 years), 94 ADHD patients (79 males, mean age 11.46 ± 2.47 years), and 147 normal controls (NC) (mean age 13.9 ± 3.0 years, 114 males) that received structured measures for IGD (IAT, IGDS9-SF, and UADI). In the ADHD group, 72.34% of the sample were above the IGD cut-off, compared with 45.45% in the ASD group and 9.5% in the NC group. ASD patients with IGD presented with greater severity and more severe attention problems, with no difference in the ASD core symptoms between patients with and without IGD. In the comparison between the ASD and ADHD groups according to the presence of IGD, ASD patients with IGD were the most severe group according to the CGI (Clinical Global Impression) scale. The follow-up, conducted on 45 patients affected by ASD, showed an improvement in CGI and CGAS (Children’s Global Assessment Scale) scores, but not in the IGD symptoms. These findings could place the diagnosis of ASD as a negative prognostic factor in the follow-up of aspects of video game addiction compared with ADHD
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