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Dive into the research topics where Cristina Fonte is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristina Fonte.


BioMed Research International | 2015

Relationship between Cognitive Performance and Motor Dysfunction in Patients with Parkinson’s Disease: A Pilot Cross-Sectional Study

Valentina Varalta; Alessandro Picelli; Cristina Fonte; Stefania Amato; Camilla Melotti; Vanja Zatezalo; Leopold Saltuari; Nicola Smania

The aim of this pilot cross-sectional study was to extensively investigate the relationships between cognitive performance and motor dysfunction involving balance and gait ability in patients with Parkinsons disease. Twenty subjects with Parkinsons disease underwent a cognitive (outcomes: Frontal Assessment Battery-Italian version, Montreal overall Cognitive Assessment, Trail Making Test, Semantic Verbal Fluency Test, and Memory with Interference Test) and motor (outcomes: Berg Balance Scale, 10-Meter Walking Test, 6-Minute Walking Test, Timed Up and Go Test performed also under dual task condition, and Unified Parkinsons Disease Rating Scale) assessment. Our correlation analyses showed that balance skills are significantly correlated with executive functions, cognitive impairment, and ability to switch attention between two tasks. Furthermore, functional mobility showed a significant correlation with cognitive impairment, verbal fluency, and ability to switch attention between two tasks. In addition, the functional mobility evaluated under the dual task condition showed a significant correlation with cognitive impairment and ability to switch attention between two tasks. These findings might help early identification of cognitive deficits or motor dysfunctions in patients with Parkinsons disease who may benefit from rehabilitative strategies. Future prospective larger-scale studies are needed to strengthen our results.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2013

Effect of Eye Patching in Rehabilitation of Hemispatial Neglect

Nicola Smania; Cristina Fonte; Alessandro Picelli; Marialuisa Gandolfi; Valentina Varalta

Eye patching (EP; monocular or right hemifield) has been proposed to improve visuospatial attention to the ignored field in patients with hemispatial neglect. The aim of this paper is to review the literature on the effects of EP in hemispatial neglect after stroke in order to convey evidence-based recommendations to clinicians in stroke rehabilitation. Thirteen intervention studies were selected from the Medline, EMBASE, Scopus, Cochrane Library, CINAHL, PsychINFO, EBRSR, and Health Star databases. Methodological quality was defined according to the Physiotherapy Evidence Database. Overall, seven studies used monocular EP, five used right hemifield patching, and one compared right monocular with right hemifield patching. Seven studies compared normal viewing to monocular or hemifield patching conditions. Six studies included a period of treatment. As to the monocular EP, four studies reported positive effects of right monocular patching. One study showed an improvement in hemispatial neglect with left monocular patching. Two studies found no superiority of right vs. left monocular patching. One study found no effects of right monocular patching. As to the right hemifield EP, one study showed improvements in neglect after right hemifield patching. Three studies found that right hemifield patching combined with another rehabilitation technique was more effective than that treatment alone. One study found no differences between right hemifield patching combined with another treatment and that treatment alone. One study found the same effect between right hemifield patching alone and another rehabilitation technique. Our results globally tend to support the usefulness of right hemifield EP in clinical practice. In order to define a level of evidence with the standard rehabilitation evidence rating tools, further properly powered randomized controlled trials or meta-analysis are needed.


Journal of Neuroengineering and Rehabilitation | 2014

Effects of contralesional robot-assisted hand training in patients with unilateral spatial neglect following stroke: a case series study

Valentina Varalta; Alessandro Picelli; Cristina Fonte; Giulia Montemezzi; Elisabetta La Marchina; Nicola Smania

BackgroundA reduction of hemispatial neglect due to stroke has been associated with activation of the contralesional hand in the contralesional hemispace. Robot-assisted upper limb training was found to effectively improve paretic arm function in stroke patients. To date no proof of concept of robot-assisted hemispatial neglect therapy has been reported in literature. This study aimed to determine whether robot-assisted left (contralesional) hand activation alone could lead to an improvement in hemispatial neglect following stroke.MethodsThree stroke patients with right brain injury underwent a 2-week training program of robotic left hand activation with the Gloreha® hand rehabilitation glove, which provides repetitive, passive mobilization of the fingers. Outcomes were assessed using the Line Crossing test, the Bells test, the Sentence Reading test, the Saccadic Training, the Sustained Attention to Response Task, and the Purdue Pegboard test.ResultsChanges were observed after treatment as follows. Line Crossing test: all patients showed improved performance (6.7%, 89.5% and 80% increase in lines crossed) with two patients reaching normal performance levels. Bells test: one patient improved performance (50% increase), while one patient showed no change and one patient declined (−10.3% change); no patient reached normal performance levels. Sentence Reading test: all patients showed improved performance (800%, 57.1% and 42.9% increase in number of sentences read) with no patient reaching normal performance level. Saccadic Training: all patients showed improved performance (−62.8%, −15.5% and −9.7% change of the left hemifield reaction time). Sustained Attention to Response Task: all patients showed improved performance (−20.5%, −5.8% and −10% change of the reaction time) with two patients reducing incorrect responses (−42.9% and −73.3%) and one patient increasing them (9.1%). Purdue Pegboard test: all patients showed improved performance (100%, 27.3% and 75% change in the left + right + both hands sub-item score).ConclusionsSome caution is warranted when interpreting our results, as the responses to the intervention were variable and might have been due to a placebo effect or fluctuating clinical conditions. However, robot-assisted hemispatial neglect therapy might be useful in stroke patients. Larger-scale investigations are needed to confirm our preliminary findings.


Neuropsychologia | 2017

Visually evoked responses from the blind field of hemianopic patients

Javier Sanchez-Lopez; Caterina A. Pedersini; Francesco Di Russo; Nicolò Cardobi; Cristina Fonte; Valentina Varalta; Massimo Prior; Nicola Smania; Silvia Savazzi; Carlo Alberto Marzi

Hemianopia is a visual field defect characterized by decreased vision or blindness in the contralesional visual field of both eyes. The presence of well documented above-chance unconscious behavioural responses to visual stimuli presented to the blind hemifield (blindsight) has stimulated a great deal of research on the neural basis of this important phenomenon. The present study is concerned with electrophysiological responses from the blind field. Since previous studies found that transient Visual Evoked Potentials (VEPs) are not entirely suitable for this purpose here we propose to use Steady-State VEPs (SSVEPs). A positive result would have important implications for the understanding of the neural bases of conscious vision. We carried out a passive SSVEP stimulation with healthy participants and hemianopic patients. Stimuli consisted of four black-and-white sinusoidal Gabor gratings presented one in each visual field quadrant and flickering one at a time at a 12 Hz rate. To assess response reliability a Signal-to-Noise Ratio analysis was conducted together with further analyses in time and frequency domains to make comparisons between groups (healthy participants and patients), side of brain lesion (left and right) and visual fields (sighted and blind). The important overall result was that stimulus presentation to the blind hemifield yielded highly reliable responses with time and frequency features broadly similar to those found for cortical extrastriate areas in healthy controls. Moreover, in the intact hemifield of hemianopics and in healthy controls there was evidence of a role of prefrontal structures in perceptual awareness. Finally, the presence of different patterns of brain reorganization depended upon the side of lesion.


Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2018

Exercise training on locomotion in patients with Alzheimer's disease. A feasibility Study

Anna Pedrinolla; Massimo Venturelli; Cristina Fonte; Daniele Munari; Maria Vittoria Benetti; Doriana Rudi; Stefano Tamburin; Ettore Muti; Luisa Zanolla; Nicola Smania; Federico Schena

BACKGROUND Although current literature has shown that patients with Alzheimers disease (AD) have worse locomotion compared with healthy counterparts, no studies have focused on the efficacy of exercise training in improving gait abnormalities including biomechanics and metabolic aspects, in this population. OBJECTIVE To verify the effectiveness of exercise training (ET) on gait parameters (i.e., speed, step and stride length, single and double support, and energy cost of walking (Cw)) in patients with AD with respect to a standard cognitive treatment (CT). METHODS In this study, we included a small portion of data belonging to a larger study (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT03034746). Patients with AD (Mini-Mental State Examination 22±5) were included in the study. Gait parameters and Cw were assessed at baseline and after 6 months (72 treatment sessions) of treatment. ET included 90 min of aerobic and strength training. CT included 90 min of cognitive stimuli. RESULTS The 16 patients assigned to ET exhibited significant improvement of Cw (-0.9±0.1 J/kg·m-1), while differences in gait parameters were negligible. The effect on gait parameters were undetectable in the 18 patients assigned to CT (-0.2±0.5 J/kg·m-1). CONCLUSIONS Data from this study showed that ET program seems effective in improving Cw in patients with AD. Interestingly, the positive effect of ET on Cw was not coupled with ameliorations of patients gait parameters, suggesting that the gain of metabolic aspects of locomotion were the main factors responsible for this positive result.


Frontiers in Physiology | 2018

Impact of Nitric Oxide Bioavailability on the Progressive Cerebral and Peripheral Circulatory Impairments During Aging and Alzheimer's Disease

Massimo Venturelli; Anna Pedrinolla; Ilaria Boscolo Galazzo; Cristina Fonte; Nicola Smania; Stefano Tamburin; Ettore Muti; Lucia Crispoltoni; Annamaria Stabile; Alessandra Pistilli; Mario Rende; Francesca B. Pizzini; Federico Schena

Advanced aging, vascular dysfunction, and nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability are recognized risk factors for Alzheimers disease (AD). However, the contribution of AD, per se, to this putative pathophysiological mechanism is still unclear. To better answer this point, we quantified cortical perfusion with arterial spin labeling (PVC-CBF), measured ultrasound internal carotid (ICA), and femoral (FA) artery blood flow in a group of patients with similar age (~78 years) but different cognitive impairment (i.e., mild cognitive impairment MCI, mild AD-AD1, moderate AD-AD2, and severe AD-AD3) and compared them to young and healthy old (aged-matched) controls. NO-metabolites and passive leg-movement (PLM) induced hyperemia were used to assess systemic vascular function. Ninety-eight individuals were recruited for this study. PVC-CBF, ICA, and FA blood flow were markedly (range of 9–17%) and significantly (all p < 0.05) reduced across the spectrum from YG to OLD, MCI, AD1, AD2, AD3 subjects. Similarly, plasma level of nitrates and the values of PLM were significantly reduced (range of 8–26%; p < 0.05) among the six groups. Significant correlations were retrieved between plasma nitrates, PLM and PVC-CBF, CA, and FA blood flow. This integrative and comprehensive approach to vascular changes in aging and AD showed progressive changes in NO bioavailability and cortical, extracranial, and peripheral circulation in patients with AD and suggested that they are directly associated with AD and not to aging. Moreover, these results suggest that AD-related impairments of circulation are progressive and not confined to the brain. The link between cardiovascular and the central nervous systems degenerative processes in patients at different severity of AD is likely related to the depletion of NO.


BIOSYSTEMS & BIOROBOTICS | 2018

The influence of cognitive factors on balance and gait

Valentina Varalta; Cristina Fonte; Daniele Munari

Gait and balance impairments are known to be omnipresent among the general elderly population, and especially among elderly people with neurological diseases (see Segev-Jacubovski et al. in Expert Rev Neurother 11:1057–1075, [1] for a review).


Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2016

Changes in Plasma β-NGF and Its Receptors Expression on Peripheral Blood Monocytes During Alzheimer’s Disease Progression

Lucia Crispoltoni; Anna Maria Stabile; Alessandra Pistilli; Massimo Venturelli; Giuliano Giorgio Cerulli; Cristina Fonte; Nicola Smania; Federico Schena; Mario Rende


Minerva Medica | 2016

Rehabilitation procedures in the management of postural orientation deficits in patients with poststroke pusher behavior: a pilot study

Marialuisa Gandolfi; Christian Geroin; F. Ferrari; L.A. Marchina; Valentina Varalta; Cristina Fonte; Alessandro Picelli; E. Dimitrova; Daniele Munari; Nicola Valè; Andreas Waldner; Nicola Smania


Archive | 2017

Cerebral and peripheral circulation and progression of Alzheimer's disease

Anna Pedrinolla; Massimo Venturelli; Cristina Fonte; Ib Galazzo; Lucia Crispoltoni; Mv Benetti; Anna Maria Stabile; Alessandra Pistilli; Mario Rende; Fb Pizzini; Nicola Smania; Federico Schena

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