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Dive into the research topics where Demetrio Messina is active.

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Featured researches published by Demetrio Messina.


American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2008

Essential Head Tremor Is Associated with Cerebellar Vermis Atrophy: A Volumetric and Voxel-Based Morphometry MR Imaging Study

A. Quattrone; Antonio Cerasa; Demetrio Messina; Giuseppe Nicoletti; G.E. Hagberg; L. Lemieux; Fabiana Novellino; Pierluigi Lanza; Gennarina Arabia; Maria Salsone

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Our aim was to investigate the presence of brain gray matter (GM) abnormalities in patients with different forms of essential tremor (ET). MATERIALS AND METHODS: We used optimized voxel-based morphometry (VBM) and manually traced single region-of-interest analysis in 50 patients with familial ET and in 32 healthy subjects. Thirty patients with ET had tremor of the arms (a-ET), whereas the remaining 20 patients had both arm and head tremor (h-ET). RESULTS: VBM showed marked atrophy of the cerebellar vermis in the patients with h-ET with respect to healthy subjects (Pcorrected < .001). Patients with a-ET showed a trend toward a vermal GM volume loss that did not reach a significant difference with respect to healthy controls (Puncorrected < .01). The region-of-interest analysis showed a reduction of the cerebellar volume (CV) in the h-ET group (98.2 ± 13.6 mm3) compared with healthy controls (110.5 ± 15.5 mm3, P < .012) as well as in the entire vermal area (790.3 ± 94.5 mm2, 898.6 ± 170.6 mm2, P < .04 in h-ET and control groups, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Atrophy of the cerebellar vermis detected in patients with h-ET strongly supports the evidence for the involvement of the cerebellum in the pathophysiology of ET. The lack of a significant CV loss observed in patients with a-ET suggests that a-ET and h-ET might represent distinct subtypes of the same disease.


Journal of Neurology | 2004

Gender-related effect of clinical and genetic variables on the cognitive impairment in multiple sclerosis

Giovanni Savettieri; Demetrio Messina; Virginia Andreoli; Simona Bonavita; Carlo Caltagirone; Rita Cittadella; Deborah Farina; Maria Fazio; Paolo Girlanda; Francesco Le Pira; Maria Liguori; Alessandra Lugaresi; Ugo Nocentini; A. Reggio; Giuseppe Salemi; Gioacchino Tedeschi; Maria Trojano; Paola Valentino; Aldo Quattrone

Abstract.Background:Cognitive impairment may occur at any time during the course of multiple sclerosis (MS), and it is often a major cause of disability in patients with the disease. The APOE-ε4 allele is the major known genetic risk factor for late onset familial and sporadic Alzheimer’s Disease (AD), and it seems to be implicated in cognitive decline in normal elderly persons.Objective:To investigate the clinical and genetic variables that can be associated with the cognitive decline in patients with MS.Methods:Five-hundred and three patients with clinically definite MS underwent a battery of neuropsychological tests and, according to the number of failed tests, were divided into cognitively normal and impaired. All patients were genotyped for APOE gene polymorphisms.Results:Fifty-six percent of MS patients showed, to different extents, cognitive impairment. Cognitive decline was predominant in men and was associated with disease duration, Kurtzke Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score, a low level of education, and, interestingly, the ε4 allele of the APOE gene. By contrast, cognitive impairment in women was independent of any investigated variable.Conclusion:The findings demonstrate that clinical and genetic factors play a role in men affected by MS developing cognitive impairment.


Parkinsonism & Related Disorders | 2011

Patterns of brain atrophy in Parkinson’s disease, progressive supranuclear palsy and multiple system atrophy

Demetrio Messina; Antonio Cerasa; Francesca Condino; Gennarina Arabia; Fabiana Novellino; Giuseppe Nicoletti; Maria Salsone; Maurizio Morelli; Pier Luigi Lanza; Aldo Quattrone

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Quantitative analysis of brain atrophy may be useful in differentiating Parkinsons Disease (PD) from Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP) and parkinsonian variant of Multiple System Atrophy (MSA-P); the aim of this study was to identify the volumetric differences of subcortical structures in patients with PD, PSP and MSA-P using a novel and validated fully-automated whole brain segmentation method. METHODS Volumetric MRIs were obtained in 72 patients with PD, 32 patients with PSP, 15 patients with MSA-P, and in 46 control subjects. Subcortical volume was measured automatically by FreeSurfer. Multivariate analysis of covariance, adjusted for intracranial volume (ICV), sex and age, was used to explore group differences. RESULTS No volumetric differences were found between PD and controls group; otherwise the volumes of the cerebellum, the thalamus, the putamen, the pallidum, the hippocampus, and the brainstem were significantly reduced in PSP and MSA-P compared to patients with PD and control subjects. PSP and MSA-P patients only differed in thalamus volume which was smaller in PSP group (p < 0.001). Moreover, patients with PSP and MSA-P showed a ventricular system (including lateral, third and fourth ventricles) larger than that detected in PD and controls (p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS Volumetric data obtained with automated segmentation of cerebral regions show a significant atrophy of different brain structures in parkinsonisms rather than in PD. Our study also demonstrates that the atrophy of the thalamus only occurs in PSP while the enlargement of the whole ventricular system characterizes both PSP and MSA-P.


American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2009

Cerebellar Atrophy in Essential Tremor Using an Automated Segmentation Method

Antonio Cerasa; Demetrio Messina; Giuseppe Nicoletti; Fabiana Novellino; Pierluigi Lanza; Francesca Condino; Gennarina Arabia; Maria Salsone; A. Quattrone

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Essential tremor (ET) is a slowly progressive disorder characterized by postural and kinetic tremors most commonly affecting the forearms and hands. Several lines of evidence from physiologic and neuroimaging studies point toward a major role of the cerebellum in this disease. Recently, voxel-based morphometry (VBM) has been proposed to quantify cerebellar atrophy in ET. However, VBM was not originally designed to study subcortical structures, and the complicated anatomy of the cerebellum may hamper the automatic processing of VBM. The aim of this study was to determine the efficacy and utility of using automated subcortical segmentation to identify atrophy of the cerebellum and other subcortical structures in patients with ET. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We used a recently developed automated volumetric method (FreeSurfer) to quantify subcortical atrophy in ET by comparing results obtained with this method with those provided by previous evidence. The study included T1-weighted MR images of 46 patients with ET grouped into those having arm ET (n = 27, a-ET) or head ET (n = 19, h-ET) and 28 healthy controls. RESULTS: Results revealed the expected reduction of cerebellar volume in patients with h-ET with respect to healthy controls after controlling for intracranial volume. No significant difference was detected in any other subcortical area. CONCLUSIONS: Volumetric data obtained with automated segmentation of subcortical and cerebellar structures approximate data from a previous study based on VBM. The current findings extend the literature by providing initial validation for using fully automated segmentation to derive cerebellar volumetric information from patients with ET.


Neurology | 2006

MRI evidence of mesial temporal sclerosis in sporadic "benign" temporal lobe epilepsy.

Angelo Labate; Patrizia Ventura; Antonio Gambardella; E. Le Piane; Eleonora Colosimo; Ugo Leggio; R. Ambrosio; Francesca Condino; Demetrio Messina; Pierluigi Lanza; Umberto Aguglia; A. Quattrone

Objective: To determine whether there is MRI-detectable mesial temporal sclerosis (MTS) in patients with sporadic benign temporal lobe epilepsy (BTLE). Methods: Brain MRIs were obtained from 101 consecutive, unrelated patients (51 women; mean age 37.3 ± 17.5 years; range 10 to 83 years) with BTLE, who reported rarely or never having had seizures at the time of long-term (>2 years) follow-up. The mean age at seizure onset was 22.3 ± 17.4 years; the mean duration of epilepsy was 16.4 ± 14.1 years. MRI diagnosis of MTS was based on the occurrence of hippocampal formation atrophy on T1 slices, an increased mesial temporal signal intensity alteration on fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery (FLAIR) or T2 images, or both. Results: Thirty-nine of 101 patients (38.6%) had MRI evidence of unilateral MTS (19/39 left MTS, 20/39 right MTS), which correlated with the epileptiform activity. Hyperintense FLAIR and T2 signal with or without atrophy was observed in 24 of 39 individuals. There was no difference between patients with or without MRI-detected MTS in age at onset and duration of epilepsy. Family history of epilepsy or febrile convulsions (FCs) was more frequent in patients with MRI-detected MTS (36%) as compared with patients with normal MRI (22.7%), but the difference was not significant. Antecedent FCs were more frequent (p = 0.03) in patients with MRI-detected MTS (9/39; 23%) vs those with normal MRI (5/62; 8%). Conclusions: MRI-detected mesial temporal sclerosis is often encountered in patients with sporadic benign temporal lobe epilepsy.


Movement Disorders | 2008

Apparent diffusion coefficient of the superior cerebellar peduncle differentiates progressive supranuclear palsy from Parkinson's disease

Giuseppe Nicoletti; Caterina Tonon; Raffaele Lodi; Francesca Condino; David Neil Manners; Emil Malucelli; Maurizio Morelli; Fabiana Novellino; Sandra Paglionico; Pierluigi Lanza; Demetrio Messina; Paolo Barone; Letterio Morgante; Mario Zappia; Bruno Barbiroli; Aldo Quattrone

The early diagnosis of progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) may be challenging, because of clinical overlapping features with Parkinsons disease (PD) and other parkinsonian syndromes such as the Parkinsonian variant of multiple system atrophy (MSA‐P). Conventional MRI can help in differentiating parkinsonian disorders but its diagnostic accuracy is still unsatisfactory. On the basis of the pathological demonstration of superior cerebellar peduncle (SCP) atrophy in patients with PSP, we assessed the SCP apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values in patients with PSP, PD, and MSA‐P in order to evaluate its differential diagnostic value in vivo. Twenty‐eight patients with PSP (14 with possible‐PSP and 14 with probable‐PSP), 15 PD, 15 MSA‐P, and 16 healthy subjects were studied by using diffusion weighted imaging (DWI). ADC was calculated in regions of interest defined in the left and right SCP by two clinically blinded operators. Intrarater (r = 0.98, P < 0.001) and interrater reliability (r = 0.97; P < 0.001) for SCP measurements were high. Patients with PSP had higher SCP rADC values (median 0.98 × 10−3mm2/s) than patients with PD (median 0.79 × 10−3 mm2/s, P < 0.001), MSA‐P (median 0.79 × 10−3 mm2/s, P < 0.001), and healthy controls (median 0.80 × 10−3 mm2/s, P < 0.001). DWI discriminated patients with PSP from PD and healthy subjects on the basis of SCP rADC individual values (100% sensitivity and specificity) and from patients with MSA‐P (96.4% sensitivity and 93.3% specificity). The higher values of rADC in SCP of patients with PSP correspond with the in vivo microstructural feature of atrophy detected postmortem and provide an additional support for early discrimination between PSP and other neurodegenerative parkinsonisms.


Movement Disorders | 2008

Glucocerebrosidase gene mutations are associated with Parkinson's disease in southern Italy.

Elvira Valeria De Marco; Grazia Annesi; Patrizia Tarantino; Francesca E. Rocca; Giovanni Provenzano; Donatella Civitelli; Innocenza Claudia Cirò Candiano; Ferdinanda Annesi; Sara Carrideo; Francesca Condino; Giuseppe Nicoletti; Demetrio Messina; Fabiana Novellino; Maurizio Morelli; Aldo Quattrone

Recent studies have reported an association between the glucocerebrosidase (GBA) gene and Parkinsons disease (PD). To elucidate the role of this gene in our population, we screened 395 PD patients and 483 controls from southern Italy for the N370S and the L444P mutations. We found 11 patients (2.8%) carrying a heterozygous mutant GBA allele, whereas only one control subject (0.2%) had a heterozygous substitution (P = 0.0018). These results strongly suggest that Italian carriers of a GBA mutation have an increased risk of developing PD.


Neurology | 2006

Bilateral transverse sinus stenosis predicts IIH without papilledema in patients with migraine

F. Bono; Demetrio Messina; Claudia Giliberto; Dario Cristiano; G. Broussard; Francesco Fera; Francesca Condino; A. Lavano; A. Quattrone

Background: The headache profile of patients with idiopathic intracranial hypertension without papilledema (IIHWOP) may be indistinguishable from that of migraine. Bilateral transverse sinus stenosis (BTSS) has been found in the majority of patients with IIHWOP. The frequency of BTSS associated with IIHWOP in patients with migraine is unknown. Objective: To detect the frequency of BTSS in adult patients with migraine and to investigate whether the presence of BTSS identifies patients with IIHWOP. Methods: In a prospective study from December 2000 to November 2005, 724 consecutive patients with recurrent headaches who fulfilled International Headache Society diagnostic criteria for migraine underwent cerebral MR venography (MRV). A portion of these patients underwent a lumbar puncture (LP) to measure CSF pressure. MRV and LP were also performed in 70 age-matched control subjects. Results: Six hundred seventy-five of the 724 patients with migraines had normal MRV. Seventy of these 675 patients underwent LP, and all of them had normal CSF pressure. Forty-nine (6.7%) of the 724 patients with migraine had BTSS. Twenty-eight of these 49 patients with BTSS underwent LP, and 19 (67.8%) had IIHWOP. The headache profiles of patients with BTSS and IIHWOP did not differ from those of patients with normal MRVs and CSF pressures within normal limits. CSF pressure was normal in both patients and controls with normal MRV. Conclusions: Of patients with migraine, 6.7% had bilateral transverse sinus stenosis; 67.8% of these patients had idiopathic intracranial hypertension without papilledema (IIHWOP). These results suggest that patients with migraine who present bilateral transverse sinus stenosis on cerebral MR venography should undergo lumbar puncture to exclude IIHWOP.


Epilepsia | 2002

Silent Celiac Disease in Patients with Childhood Localization-Related Epilepsies

Angelo Labate; Antonio Gambardella; Demetrio Messina; S. Tammaro; E. Le Piane; Domenico Pirritano; C. Cosco; P. Doldo; Rosalucia Mazzei; R. L. Oliveri; Domenico Bosco; Mario Zappia; Paola Valentino; Umberto Aguglia; Aldo Quattrone

Summary:  Purpose: To evaluate how many patients with a clinical picture of idiopathic childhood localization‐related epilepsies may also have silent celiac disease (CD). This will help determine whether investigation for CD should be restricted to those patients with childhood partial epilepsy with occipital paroxysms (CPEO) or should be extended to all patients with childhood partial epilepsy (CPE) regardless of seizure type and electroencephalographic (EEG) paroxysms.


Epilepsy Research | 2000

Familial temporal lobe epilepsy autosomal dominant inheritance in a large pedigree from southern Italy.

Antonio Gambardella; Demetrio Messina; Emilio Le Piane; R. Luciano Oliveri; Grazia Annesi; Mario Zappia; Eva Andermann; Aldo Quattrone; Umberto Aguglia

To further elucidate the inheritance pattern and range of phenotypic manifestations of benign familial temporal lobe epilepsy (FTLE), we report a large family recently identified in southern Italy. There were 8 patients (4 men), ranging in age from 31 to 68 years in three generations. One affected patient was deceased at the time of the study. Genealogical study strongly supported autosomal dominant inheritance with incomplete penetrance, as three unaffected individuals transmitted the disease. Clinical anticipation could not be assessed because of the ascertainment method. Male to male transmission occurred. Identifiable antecedents for seizures were present in only two patients, who had a simple febrile convulsion and a closed head trauma, respectively. Migraine was overrepresented in this family. Onset of seizures ranged from 17 to 52 years (mean: 27 years). All patients had weekly simple partial seizures suggestive of temporal origin with vegetative or experiential phenomena. Very rare partial complex seizures occurred in 6/7 patients. One had two generalized nocturnal seizures as well. Two had previously been misdiagnosed as having gastritis or panic attacks, and one had not been diagnosed. Interictal anteromesiotemporal spiking was seen in 5/7 patients, and occurred mostly during NREM sleep. Neurological examination, brain CT or MR scans were normal. Antiepileptic medication always controlled the seizures.

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Maria Salsone

National Research Council

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Grazia Annesi

National Research Council

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