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Dive into the research topics where Barbara Petolicchio is active.

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Featured researches published by Barbara Petolicchio.


European Journal of Neurology | 2016

Psychopathological comorbidities in medication-overuse headache: a multicentre clinical study.

Paola Sarchielli; Ilenia Corbelli; Paolo Messina; L. M. Cupini; Giorgio Bernardi; Giorgio Bono; V. Di Piero; Barbara Petolicchio; Paolo Livrea; Maria Pia Prudenzano; Luigi Alberto Pini; Giorgio Sandrini; Marta Allena; Gioacchino Tedeschi; A. Russo; Stefano Caproni; Ettore Beghi; Paolo Calabresi

In medication‐overuse headache (MOH) patients, the presence of psychopathological disturbances may be a predictor of relapse and poor response to treatment. This multicentre study aimed to assess the occurrence of psychopathological disorders in MOH patients by comparing the incidence of psychopathological disturbances with episodic migraine (EM) patients and healthy controls (HC).


Journal of Headache and Pain | 2007

The effects of a sensitisation campaign on unrecognised migraine: the Casilino study

Vittorio Di Piero; Marta Altieri; Giuseppe Conserva; Barbara Petolicchio; Laura Di Clemente; Jayasena Hettiarachchi

A striking feature of migraine is the difference between the estimated migraine prevalence and the actual number of migraineurs consulting their general practitioners (GPs). We investigated the impact of a sensitisation campaign on migraine in a large cohort of patients, living in a district of Rome. The study involved 10 GPs and a population of about 12 000 people, contacted by mail and posters located in GP clinics. Both the letter and poster stressed the impact of headache on quality of life and included the Italian version of the three-item Identification of Migraine (ID Migraine) screening test, consisting of questions on disability, nausea and photophobia. If the subjects suffered from headaches, they were invited to contact their GPs for a visit and a free consultation with a headache expert. By means of this sensitisation campaign, 195 headache patients consulted their GPs. Ninety-two percent of them (n=179) were migraineurs; 73% of them had never consulted a physician for headache. The ID Migraine test had a sensitivity of 0.92 (95% CI 0.86–0.95), a specificity of 0.75 (95% CI 0.47–0.91) and a positive predictive value (PPV) of 0.97 (95% CI 0.93–0.99) for a clinical diagnosis of migraine, according to the International Headache Society (IHS) criteria. This study confirms that a large number of migraine patients never see a doctor for their headache. This awareness campaign is likely to identify the severest cases of undiagnosed migraineurs. However, mailing campaigns do not seem to be so effective in bringing undiagnosed migraine patients into the primary care setting, and more efficient strategies have to be planned.


Journal of Headache and Pain | 2017

Cerebral gray matter volume in patients with chronic migraine: correlations with clinical features

Gianluca Coppola; Barbara Petolicchio; Antonio Di Renzo; Emanuele Tinelli; Cherubino Di Lorenzo; Vincenzo Parisi; Mariano Serrao; Valentina Calistri; Stefano Tardioli; Gaia Cartocci; Anna Ambrosini; Francesca Caramia; Vittorio Di Piero; Francesco Pierelli

BackgroundTo date, few MRI studies have been performed in patients affected by chronic migraine (CM), especially in those without medication overuse. Here, we performed magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) voxel-based morphometry (VBM) analyses to investigate the gray matter (GM) volume of the whole brain in patients affected by CM. Our aim was to investigate whether fluctuations in the GM volumes were related to the clinical features of CM.MethodsTwenty untreated patients with CM without a past medical history of medication overuse underwent 3-Tesla MRI scans and were compared to a group of 20 healthy controls (HCs). We used SPM12 and the CAT12 toolbox to process the MRI data and to perform VBM analyses of the structural T1-weighted MRI scans. The GM volume of patients was compared to that of HCs with various corrected and uncorrected thresholds. To check for possible correlations, patients’ clinical features and GM maps were regressed.ResultsInitially, we did not find significant differences in the GM volume between patients with CM and HCs (p < 0.05 corrected for multiple comparisons). However, using more-liberal uncorrected statistical thresholds, we noted that compared to HCs, patients with CM exhibited clusters of regions with lower GM volumes including the cerebellum, left middle temporal gyrus, left temporal pole/amygdala/hippocampus/pallidum/orbitofrontal cortex, and left occipital areas (Brodmann areas 17/18). The GM volume of the cerebellar hemispheres was negatively correlated with the disease duration and positively correlated with the number of tablets taken per month.ConclusionNo gross morphometric changes were observed in patients with CM when compared with HCs. However, using more-liberal uncorrected statistical thresholds, we observed that CM is associated with subtle GM volume changes in several brain areas known to be involved in nociception/antinociception, multisensory integration, and analgesic dependence. We speculate that these slight morphometric impairments could lead, at least in a subgroup of patients, to the development and continuation of maladaptive acute medication usage.


Journal of Clinical Ultrasound | 2013

Cardioembolic stroke: Protective effect of a severe internal carotid artery stenosis in a patient with cardiac embolism.

Edoardo Vicenzini; Barbara Petolicchio; Massimiliano Toscano; S. La Cesa; Francesca Puledda; Gian Luigi Lenzi; Vittorio Di Piero

Cardioembolic stroke is generally caused by intracranial artery occlusion. Clots may be identified in the intracranial vessels by means of conventional neuroimaging in the acute phase. High‐resolution ultrasonography may show some features suggestive of cardiac emboli when occluding extracranial carotid arteries. We describe a patient with cardioembolic ischemic stroke in the right hemisphere in whom a left internal carotid artery stenosis paradoxically protected the ipsilateral hemisphere from distal intracranial embolism. The patient also presented multiple acute ischemic embolic lesions in the right middle cerebral artery territory and in the right occipital lobe, which was fed by the posterior cerebral artery, anomally originating from the right carotid siphon. Interestingly, the left internal carotid artery—which showed a severe preexisting stenosis—was occluded by the cardiac clot, whereas the right internal carotid artery only presented a moderate stenosis that had probably allowed the clots to pass. Therefore, the severe left internal carotid artery stenosis may have blocked the cardiac embolus, preventing it from reaching the ipsilateral hemisphere.


Cerebrovascular Diseases | 2013

Predictors and Timing of Recanalization in Intracranial Carotid Artery and Siphon Dissection: An Ultrasound Follow-up Study

Edoardo Vicenzini; Massimiliano Toscano; Ilaria Maestrini; Barbara Petolicchio; G. L. Lenzi; V. Di Piero

Background: Intra- and extracranial internal carotid artery dissections (ICD) are two different pathological conditions. Extracranial dissection is considered to be among the most frequent causes of stroke in the young and the segment generally reopens in 2 out of 3 cases, completely or partially, within 6 months. Intracranial ICD (IICD) is considered a rare occurrence in stroke and, accordingly, there are few systematic published data. However, it is a clinically significant condition that may cause severely disabling ischemic stroke or subarachnoid hemorrhage. In the past, sole availability of invasive imaging methods for its detection may have induced an underreporting. The aim of the study was to analyze ultrasound findings, timing and predictors of recanalization in patients with IICD. Methods: IICD acute patients admitted to our Stroke Unit were submitted to carotid sonographic seriated monitoring, daily for the 1st week after symptom onset, at day 14, at month 1 and every 3 months thereafter up to a follow-up of 4 years. Contrast carotid ultrasound was performed in patients with persistent occlusion after month 1. Results: Fourteen acute patients with IICD were enrolled. Extracranial internal carotid patency was observed in 8 patients at first ultrasound scans; all of these showed complete intracranial recanalization within the 1st week and oral anticoagulants were withdrawn after 6 months. Conversely, in 6 patients retrograde extracranial internal carotid thrombosis was immediately observed, since the first ultrasound scans. In 4 of these the occlusion persisted after 4 years while 2 of them had only a partial recanalization, with evidence at contrast ultrasound of still late remodeling processes in the extracranial thrombus up to 2 years after the first observation; for this reason, in these 2 patients anticoagulation was not discontinued, while in the 4 patients with persistent, stable, occlusion, therapy was suspended 1 year after the diagnosis. Conclusions: Identification of the site of dissection - i.e. extra- versus intracranial - is fundamental in clinical studies for outcome and prognosis evaluation. Carotid ultrasound strict surveillance is important to monitor eventual recanalization in patients with ICD, even in a late phase. Retrograde internal carotid thrombosis seems to be correlated with persistent occlusion and partial recanalization. Remodeling of thrombotic material in the internal carotid artery may, however, continue for up to 2 years. In these cases, contrast ultrasound evidence of thrombus morphological changes may support the decision to continue anticoagulation.


European Journal of Neurology | 2018

Early management of patients with medication-overuse headache: results from a multicentre clinical study

Ilenia Corbelli; Paola Sarchielli; P. Eusebi; L.M. Cupini; Stefano Caproni; Paolo Calabresi; A. Pini; S. Guerzoni; Paolo Livrea; P. Prudenzano; Giorgio Bernardi; M. Diomedi; Gioacchino Tedeschi; A. Tessitore; A. Russo; F. Pisani; R. Pisani; Giorgio Bono; C. Zandrini; G. Misaggi; V. DiPiero; L. DiClemente; M. Squitieri; E. Vicenzini; Barbara Petolicchio; Giorgio Sandrini; M. Allena; M. Berlangeri

Educational intervention has proved to be effective in reducing drug abuse in uncomplicated medication‐overuse headache (MOH). This ancillary of the SAMOHA multicentre study aimed to assess any differences in phenotypic characteristics, type and amount of drugs overused, and comorbidities between patients with MOH who responded to simple advice and those who did not.


Journal of Headache and Pain | 2015

O049. Psychodynamic functioning in chronic headache patients: a short term psychodynamic psychotherapy (STPP) study

Barbara Petolicchio; Martina Squitieri; Alessandro Viganò; Massimiliano Toscano; Arianna Sirolli; Sara Aielli; Romina Di Giambattista; Edoardo Vicenzini; Edmond Gilliéron; Vittorio Di Piero

Background Chronic headache (CM) occurs in 2-5% of the general population, often associated with medication-overuse headache (MOH), and comorbid psychiatric disorders [1,2]. Among therapeutic approaches, psychotherapeutic interventions may be effective, either alone or associated with pharmacological therapies. As we previously showed, the short-term psychodynamic psychotherapy (STPP), plus drug therapy, is more effective in patients with probable MOH to reduce headache symptoms and relapse rate than drug therapy alone [3]. Moreover, STPP alone is not inferior to valproate in CM, as preventive therapy [4]. According to psychodinamic diagnosis (BPI) some psychodynamic profiles with poor ability to process the emotional content or low mentalizing level (i.e., pre-psychosis, psychosis and borderline) could be at risk of developing chronic headaches. The aim of the present study was to identify the most frequent psychodynamic profiles in CM and test the effective of STPP in those patients with no record of psychiatric disorders.


Journal of Headache and Pain | 2015

P053. An Italian study on the actual cost/benefit of onabotulinumtoxinA (BT-A) in chronic migraine: preliminary results

Barbara Petolicchio; Massimiliano Toscano; Martina Squitieri; Alessandro Viganò; Edoardo Vicenzini; Vittorio Di Piero

Background In Italy, the estimated cost of chronic migraine (CM) is around six billion euros per year (Agenas, 2011) considering the health costs, the loss in working productivity and quality of life. The efficacy of BT-A in the prophylactic treatment of CM has been demonstrated [1]. However, BT-A therapy is expensive and the limited health service resource may raise the question of the cost/benefit ratio. Ruggeri et al [1] carried out a study to provide an estimate of the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of the treatment of CM with BT-A 2 . They compared the benefit as extrapolated from the PREEMPT data with those of a population of CM from the METEOR study, as well as with those of an actual population of CM from a district of Rome [1]. In the present study we compared actual costs and benefit in a CM population before and after BT-A treatment.


European Neurology | 2015

Neuroanatomical, Clinical and Cognitive Correlates of Post-Stroke Dysphagia

Massimiliano Toscano; Emanuela Cecconi; Elisa Capiluppi; Alessandro Viganò; Pierluigi Bertora; Laura Campiglio; Claudio Mariani; Barbara Petolicchio; Tullia Sasso d'Elia; Angela Verzina; Edoardo Vicenzini; Marco Fiorelli; Giuliana Cislaghi; Vittorio Di Piero


Neurological Sciences | 2015

A study of migraine characteristics in joint hypermobility syndrome a.k.a. Ehlers–Danlos syndrome, hypermobility type

Francesca Puledda; Alessandro Viganò; Claudia Celletti; Barbara Petolicchio; Massimiliano Toscano; Edoardo Vicenzini; Marco Castori; Guido Laudani; Donatella Valente; Filippo Camerota; Vittorio Di Piero

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Vittorio Di Piero

Sapienza University of Rome

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Alessandro Viganò

Sapienza University of Rome

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Edoardo Vicenzini

Sapienza University of Rome

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Marta Altieri

Sapienza University of Rome

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Martina Squitieri

Sapienza University of Rome

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V. Di Piero

Sapienza University of Rome

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G. L. Lenzi

Sapienza University of Rome

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