Alessandra Tabarrini
Sapienza University of Rome
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Publication
Featured researches published by Alessandra Tabarrini.
Pediatric Pulmonology | 2014
Francesca Romana Patacchioli; Alessandra Tabarrini; Cristina Mihaela Ghiciuc; Lucia Corina Dima-Cozma; Anna Prete; Carlotta Bianchini; Ferdinando Nicoletti; David Gozal; Maria Pia Villa
The present pilot study was performed to evaluate the HPA axis and ANS activity by measuring salivary cortisol and α‐amylase diurnal trajectory and production, respectively, in mild or moderate‐to‐severe (MS) OSA‐affected, but otherwise healthy, children. Moreover, a correlative analysis was performed between the salivary biomarker concentrations and the PSG variables characterizing the OSA severity.
Journal of Attention Disorders | 2013
Silvia Miano; Renato Donfrancesco; Pasquale Parisi; Jole Rabasco; Anna Rita Mazzotta; Alessandra Tabarrini; Ottavio Vitelli; Maria Pia Villa
Objective: Five sleep ADHD phenotypes have been hypothesized: (a) the hypo-arousal state of the “primary” form of ADHD, (b) the sleep phase advanced disorder, (c) sleep disordered breathing (SDB), (d) restless legs syndrome and/or periodic limb movements disorder (PLMD), and (e) epilepsy. Method: Five case reports are presented; each child but one underwent video-polysomnography. Results: The first case report is an example of ADHD and SDB, with improvement of hypersomnolence after resolution of sleep apnea. The second case shows the impact of delayed sleep onset latency in the pathogenesis of ADHD, and the efficacy of melatonin. The third case report describes the association with PLMD, with amelioration after iron supplementation. The other two cases are examples of ADHD and epilepsy, with clinical improvement after antiepileptic treatment was started. Conclusion: A diagnostic and therapeutic algorithm should be designed to find the best first-line treatment for ADHD and sleep problems/epilepsy.
Epilepsy & Behavior | 2013
Silvia Miano; Alessandra Tabarrini; Ottavio Vitelli; Annamaria Mazzotta; Marco Del Pozzo; Jole Rabasco; Mario Barreto; Pasquale Parisi; Alessandro Ferretti; Maria Pia Villa
Studies in the literature data have shown that the prevalence of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in children with epilepsy is high and that treatment for OSA leads to a reduction in the number of seizures; by contrast, few studies have demonstrated an increased prevalence of interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs) or epilepsy in children with sleep-disordered breathing (SDB). The aim of the present study was to confirm the high prevalence of IEDs or epilepsy in a large sample of children with SDB and to collect follow-up data. Children were recruited prospectively and underwent their first video-polysomnography (video-PSG) for SDB in a teaching hospital sleep center. Of the 298 children who fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for sleep-disordered breathing, 48 (16.1%) children were found to have IEDs, three of these 48 children were also found to have nocturnal seizures (two females diagnosed with rolandic epilepsy and a male diagnosed with frontal lobe epilepsy). Only 11 subjects underwent a second video-PSG after 6months; at the second video-PSG, the IEDs had disappeared in six subjects, who also displayed a reduced AHI and an increased mean overnight saturation. Thirty-eight of the 250 children without IEDs underwent a second video-PSG after 6months. Of these 250 children, four, who did not display any improvement in the respiratory parameters and were found to experience numerous stereotyped movements during sleep, were diagnosed with nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy. Our study confirms the high prevalence of IEDs in children with SDB. Follow-up data indicate that they may recede over time, accompanied by an improvement of sleep respiratory parameters.
Journal of Child Neurology | 2014
Ottavio Vitelli; Silvia Miano; Alessandra Tabarrini; Anna Rita Mazzotta; Maria Chiara Supino; Martina Forlani; Maria Pia Villa
Because signs of nocturnal seizures can overlap with sleep respiratory events, clinicians can have difficulty distinguishing abnormal events related to sleep disorders from epileptic seizures. We describe the case of a 3-year-old child presenting with ictal electroencephalographic (EEG) activity associated with a particular form of atypical obstructive sleep apnea, characterized by increased respiratory rate, paradoxical breathing, desaturations, and tonic-dystonic posture associated with movement artifacts. Following cardiorespiratory polysomnography, the patient was initially misdiagnosed as having severe obstructive sleep apnea syndrome.
Sleep and Breathing | 2014
Maria Pia Villa; Rosa Castaldo; Silvia Miano; Maria Chiara Paolino; Ottavio Vitelli; Alessandra Tabarrini; Anna Rita Mazzotta; Manuela Cecili; Mario Barreto
Sleep Medicine | 2015
Ottavio Vitelli; Alessandra Tabarrini; Silvia Miano; Jole Rabasco; Nicoletta Pietropaoli; Martina Forlani; Pasquale Parisi; Maria Pia Villa
European Respiratory Journal | 2014
Nicoletta Pietroapoli; Jole Rabasco; Ottiavio Vitelli; Maria Chiara Supino; Alessandra Tabarrini; Chiara Romano; Marco Del Pozzo; Maria Pia Villa
European Respiratory Journal | 2014
Ottavio Vitelli; Alessandra Tabarrini; Jole Rabasco; Nicoletta Pietropaoli; Anna Rita Mazzotta; Chiara Romano; Martina Forlani; Maria Pia Villa
European Respiratory Journal | 2013
Anna Rita Mazzotta; Giuliano Tocci; Silvia Miano; Simona Bianchi; Alessandra Tabarrini; Martina Forlani; Maria Pia Villa
European Respiratory Journal | 2012
Susanna Fedeli; Valentina Negro; Maria Chiara Supino; Susanna Bonafoni; Alessandra Tabarrini; Laura Papini; Milena Margiotta; Giovanna Gentile; Maria Pia Villa