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Dive into the research topics where Daniela Chieffo is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniela Chieffo.


Epilepsia | 2005

Early Thalamic Injury Associated with Epilepsy and Continuous Spike–Wave during Slow Sleep

Francesco Guzzetta; Domenica Battaglia; Chiara Veredice; Valeria Donvito; Marika Pane; Donatella Lettori; Francesca Chiricozzi; Daniela Chieffo; Tommaso Tartaglione

Summary:  Purpose: Mechanisms inducing continuous spike–wave during slow sleep (CSWS) in encephalopathy with electrical status epilepticus during sleep are still unclear. Recently, some sporadic cases with early thalamic injury associated with CSWS have been reported. The aim of the study was to investigate in a population of patients with an early thalamic injury the presence of an activation of paroxysmal activities during sleep, their characteristics, and possible relations to neuroimaging and neuropsychological features.


Epilepsia | 2011

Cognitive development in Dravet syndrome: a retrospective, multicenter study of 26 patients.

Francesca Ragona; Tiziana Granata; Bernardo Dalla Bernardina; Francesca Offredi; Francesca Darra; Domenica Battaglia; Monica Morbi; Daniela Brazzo; Simona Cappelletti; Daniela Chieffo; Ilaria De Giorgi; Elena Fontana; Elena Freri; Carla Marini; Alessio Toraldo; Nicola Specchio; Pierangelo Veggiotti; Federico Vigevano; Renzo Guerrini; Francesco Guzzetta

Purpose:  To clarify the role of epilepsy and genetic background in determining the cognitive outcome of patients with Dravet syndrome.


Seizure-european Journal of Epilepsy | 2008

Early hemispherectomy in catastrophic epilepsy: A neuro-cognitive and epileptic long-term follow-up

Donatella Lettori; Domenica Battaglia; A. Sacco; Chiara Veredice; Daniela Chieffo; Luca Massimi; Tommaso Tartaglione; F. Chiricozzi; S. Staccioli; Antonio Mittica; C. Di Rocco; Francesco Guzzetta

The authors report their experience about a neuro-cognitive and epileptic long-term follow-up of children with catastrophic epilepsy treated with hemispherectomy in the first 5 years of life. Nineteen children with resistant epilepsy that significantly interfered with their neuro-cognitive development underwent hemispherectomy within 5 years of life (mean: 2 years, 3 months; range: 5 months to 5 years). All patients were assessed before surgery and after, at least at the end of the follow-up (mean: 6 years and 6 months; range: 2-11 years and 2 months) with a full clinical examination including motor ability and functional status evaluation as well as behaviour observation, neuroimaging and an ictal/interictal prolonged scalp video-EEG. A seizure-free outcome was obtained in 73.7% of patients. Gross motility generally improved and cognitive competence did not worsen, with an evident progress in two cases. Consistently with previous reports, evolution was worse in cortical dysplasia than in progressive or acquired vascular cerebropathies. The excellent epileptic outcome and the lack of developmental deterioration in comparison with other more aged series seem to suggest a possible better evolution in earlier surgery treatment. To confirm this suggestion, however, further experience with larger series is needed.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2010

Long-term neuropsychological development in single-suture craniosynostosis treated early

Daniela Chieffo; Gianpiero Tamburrini; Luca Massimi; Simona Di Giovanni; Cristina Giansanti; Massimo Caldarelli; Concezio Di Rocco

OBJECT The authors evaluated the results of complete cognitive function examinations in a series of 65 adolescents who had undergone surgery for sagittal or unicoronal craniosynostosis when they were younger than 1 year old. METHODS Each of the 65 study participants was evaluated individually. The neuropsychological assessment, consisting of a battery of tests tailored to the patients age, cognitive level, and level of cooperation, was conducted in 2 separate sessions on the same day. The main outcome measures included fine motor skills, language, visual motor spatial and visual perceptual skills, working and visual memory, attention, executive function, and verbal fluency. RESULTS Thirty-five children (mean age 13.4 years) were affected by sagittal synostosis and 30 (mean age 14.9 years) by unicoronal synostosis (16 right-sided, 14 left-sided). The mean age at surgery was 7.2 months. All of the children had begun school at a normal age and attended regular classes. Seven percent of those with sagittal craniosynostosis demonstrated visuospatial and constructional ability defects with associated visual memory recall deficits; 17% also exhibited selective and sustained attention deficits. Approximately one-third (30%) of the children with anterior plagiocephaly had processing and planning speech deficits. CONCLUSIONS Data in this study support the hypothesis that children with sagittal or unicoronal craniosynostosis, although they undergo early surgical treatment, may still manifest lower than average results at long-term selective neuropsychological evaluations.


Epilepsy Research | 2011

Neuropsychological development in children with Dravet syndrome.

Daniela Chieffo; Domenica Battaglia; Donatella Lettori; Maria Del Re; Claudia Brogna; Eugenio Mercuri; Francesco Guzzetta

PURPOSE Aim of this study is to report a detailed profile of neuropsychological development in children with Dravet syndrome. METHODS Twelve children with Dravet syndrome were longitudinally assessed using a detailed clinical and neuropsychological evaluation. Six had typical features of severe myoclonic epilepsy in infancy (SMEI) whereas the other six resulted borderline. All twelve underwent serial neuropsychological assessments with neurodevelopmental scales and further assessment of specific cognitive abilities. RESULTS Our results reported an apparent normal development before disease onset, a general evolution in two main stages, more active the first one and with a general trend towards a clinical stabilization afterwards. The onset of cognitive decline was generally later than what is reported in other series; furthermore, the impairment of cognitive development is less severe, especially in borderline cases. As to specific cognitive competence, attention, visual motor integration, visual perception as well as executive functions are the most impaired abilities; language appears less involved, with a predominance of phonological defects. CONCLUSIONS In our cohort the global development of patients appear less affected than in previous studies. Furthermore, our study points out an impairment of several specific cognitive skills even in patients with a developmental quotient apparently in the normal range. Language and other cognitive skill impairment such as attention, visuo-spatial organization, working memory and executive function appear consistent with what is usually found in cerebellar disorders.


Epilepsy Research | 2011

Early development in Dravet syndrome; visual function impairment precedes cognitive decline

Daniela Chieffo; Daniela Ricci; Giovanni Baranello; Diego Martinelli; Chiara Veredice; Donatella Lettori; Domenica Battaglia; Eugenio Mercuri; Francesco Guzzetta

Aim of the study was to describe prospectively the early neuropsychological evolution including the first pre-cognitive stages of the Severe Myoclonic Epilepsy in Infancy (SMEI) or Dravet syndrome. Five cases, four of whom since before a diagnostic evidence of the Dravet syndrome, were followed up. Full clinical assessment including developmental, visual function and behaviour assessments were serially performed. In four cases, a variable onset age of cognitive decline assessed with developmental scales was preceded some months before by an impairment of visual function; the remaining patient during all the course of follow-up till 51 months of age showed a normal development without visual impairment. A cognitive decline with variable onset was generally confirmed in Dravet syndrome. The previous early impairment of visual function seems to herald the cognitive decline and provides useful prognostic information; furthermore, it possibly suggests some clues for a better understanding of the mechanisms of cognitive deterioration in this syndrome.


Brain & Development | 2011

Surgery of children with frontal lobe lesional epilepsy: neuropsychological study

Daniela Chieffo; Donatella Lettori; Ilaria Contaldo; Francesca Perrino; Alessandra Graziano; Concetta Palermo; Antonio Mittica; G. Tamburrini; Domenica Battaglia; Concezio Di Rocco; Francesco Guzzetta

AIM OF THE STUDY was to provide new data about the evolution of neuropsychological findings in patients with lesional frontal lobe epilepsy (FLE) operated on with lesion excision. PATIENTS AND METHODS Twelve patients with lesional FLE underwent full clinical examination including neurological, neuropsychological and developmental assessments, high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), ictal and interictal prolonged EEG monitoring and evaluation of seizure semeiology before and after surgery. The mean follow-up duration was 2 years and 10 months (range=14 months-7 years). Another group of lesional temporal lobe epilepsy, matched for the age at surgery and side of surgery, was likewise studied in order to compare neuropsychological patterns and to try to find out specific features in frontal lobe epilepsy evolution. RESULTS All patients resulted seizure free at outcome except one belonging to Engels class II. Before surgery general intelligence was similar in FLE as well as in TLE group. Executive functions and motor coordination were frequently affected in FLE whereas patients with TLE often presented with deficits in naming, visual memory and visuo-spatial attention. After surgery there was a frequent decline of IQ in FLE group together with a slight deterioration, especially of executive functions in some patients. An improvement of behaviour was often observed in both groups. CONCLUSIONS As already reported in literature, neuropsychological pre-surgical data confirms the involvement of attention and executive functions in lesional FLE. No significant neuropsychological improvement was produced by surgery that determined in some cases a slight decline of general intelligence and specific frontal abilities. Yet, generally behaviour improved and seizures were controlled.


Childs Nervous System | 2005

Developmental plasticity after right hemispherectomy in an epileptic adolescent with early brain injury

F. Chiricozzi; Daniela Chieffo; Domenica Battaglia; L. Iuvone; C. Acquafondata; L. Cesarini; A. Sacco; R. Chiera; C. Di Rocco; Francesco Guzzetta

ObjectivesThe authors present the case of an adolescent affected with refractory epilepsy due to a neonatal ischemic infarction of the right medial cerebral artery. Hemiplegic since the first months of life, she began presenting motor partial seizures associated with drop attacks at 4.5 years; these were initially well controlled by antiepileptic drugs, but at 10 years seizures appeared again and became refractory. Thus, at 14 years and 10 months, she was submitted to a right hemispherectomy that made her rapidly seizure free. In the post-surgical follow-up lasting 5 years, neuropsychological serial assessments showed an impressive progressive improvement of cognitive skills, namely, visuospatial abilities. This case seems to challenge the widely spread feeling that functional catch-up in brain-injured children could only occur early in life. In effect, the astonishing recovery especially of visuospatial skills in our case occurred in adolescence after a late surgical intervention of right hemispherectomy.MethodsDifferent neuropsychological aspects are discussed. The reorganisation process recovered the spatial and linguistic abilities as well as the verbal and visuospatial memory; however, there was a persistent impairment of complex spatial and perceptual skills as well as recall abilities. Despite the deficit of complex visual stimuli processing, the patient showed a good performance in the recognition of unknown faces.ConclusionsProbably, the absence of seizures in the first 4 years of life could have allowed a generally adequate compensatory reorganisation, successively masked by the persistent and diffuse epileptic disorder. The seizure control produced by surgery eventually made evident the effectiveness of the brain reorganisation.


Epilepsy Research | 2013

Cognitive decline in Dravet syndrome: is there a cerebellar role?

Domenica Battaglia; Daniela Chieffo; Rosamaria Siracusano; Chiara De Waure; Claudia Brogna; Domiziana Ranalli; Ilaria Contaldo; Gaetano Tortorella; Eugenio Mercuri; Francesco Guzzetta

PURPOSE The aim of the study was to perform a detailed assessment of cognitive abilities and behaviour in a series of epileptic patients with Dravet syndrome (DS) in order to establish a possible cerebellar-like pattern. METHODS Nine children with DS without major behavioural disturbances and with cognitive abilities compatible with the assessment of specific cognitive skills (IQ>45) were enrolled in the study, in parallel with another group of nine epileptic patients (cryptogenic or symptomatic with minor brain injuries) consecutively admitted into the hospital matched for chronological age and IQ. All cases underwent neurological examination, long term EEG monitoring, neuroimaging and genetic analysis as well as a neuropsychological assessment including specific cognitive skills. RESULTS On neurological examination 8 of the 9 DS patients had cerebellar signs, which were mild in six and more severe in the other two cases. DS patients had a constant discrepancy between verbal and performance items scales (verbal better than visual-spatial) that was not found in the control group. As to specific cognitive competence, the DS patients differ from the control group in the pattern of cognitive defects involving four main areas of cognitive abilities (a) expressive language with relatively spared comprehension, (b) visual-spatial organization, (c) executive function defects, (d) behavioural disorders. CUNCLUSIONS The pattern of cognitive difficulties found in DS patients is consistent with what is reported in literature as cerebellar cognitive syndrome and may account for a possible cerebellar origin (at least as co-factor) of the cognitive decline observed in DS patients, as suggested by other clinical and experimental studies.


Epilepsia | 2014

Unusual 4p16.3 deletions suggest an additional chromosome region for the Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome-associated seizures disorder

Marcella Zollino; Daniela Orteschi; M Ruiter; Rolph Pfundt; K Steindl; Concetta Cafiero; Stefania Ricciardi; Ilaria Contaldo; Daniela Chieffo; Domiziana Ranalli; Celeste Acquafondata; Marina Murdolo; Giuseppe Marangi; Alessia Asaro; Domenica Battaglia

Seizure disorder is one of the most relevant clinical manifestations in Wolf‐Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS) and it acts as independent prognostic factor for the severity of intellectual disability (ID). LETM1, encoding a mitochondrial protein playing a role in K+/H+ exchange and in Ca2+ homeostasis, is currently considered the major candidate gene. However, whether haploinsufficiency limited to LETM1 is enough to cause epilepsy is still unclear. The main purpose of the present research is to define the 4p chromosome regions where genes for seizures reside.

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Domenica Battaglia

The Catholic University of America

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Francesco Guzzetta

The Catholic University of America

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Donatella Lettori

The Catholic University of America

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Gianpiero Tamburrini

The Catholic University of America

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Concezio Di Rocco

The Catholic University of America

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Eugenio Mercuri

The Catholic University of America

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C. Di Rocco

The Catholic University of America

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Luca Massimi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Massimo Caldarelli

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Tommaso Tartaglione

The Catholic University of America

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