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Dive into the research topics where Domenica Crupi is active.

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Featured researches published by Domenica Crupi.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Enhances BDNF–TrkB Signaling in Both Brain and Lymphocyte

Hoau-Yan Wang; Domenica Crupi; JingJing Liu; Andres Stucky; Giuseppe Cruciata; Alessandro Di Rocco; Eitan Friedman; Angelo Quartarone; M. Felice Ghilardi

Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) induces neuronal long-term potentiation or depression. Although brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and its cognate tyrosine receptor kinase B (TrkB) contribute to the effects of rTMS, their precise role and underlying mechanism remain poorly understood. Here we show that daily 5 Hz rTMS for 5 d improves BDNF–TrkB signaling in rats by increasing the affinity of BDNF for TrkB, which results in higher tyrosine-phosphorylated TrkB, increased recruitment of PLC-γ1 and shc/N-shc to TrkB, and heightened downstream ERK2 and PI-3K activities in prefrontal cortex and in lymphocytes. The elevated BDNF–TrkB signaling is accompanied by an increased association between the activated TrkB and NMDA receptor (NMDAR). In normal human subjects, 5 d rTMS to motor cortex decreased resting motor threshold, which correlates with heightened BDNF–TrkB signaling and intensified TrkB–NMDAR association in lymphocytes. These findings suggest that rTMS to cortex facilitates BDNF–TrkB–NMDAR functioning in both cortex and lymphocytes.


Epilepsia | 2007

Slow Repetitive TMS for Drug-resistant Epilepsy: Clinical and EEG Findings of a Placebo-controlled Trial

Roberto Cantello; Simone Rossi; Claudia Varrasi; Monica Ulivelli; Carlo Civardi; Sabina Bartalini; Giampaolo Vatti; Massimo Cincotta; A. Borgheresi; Gaetano Zaccara; Angelo Quartarone; Domenica Crupi; Angela Laganà; M. Inghilleri; Anna Teresa Giallonardo; Alfredo Berardelli; Loredana Pacifici; Florinda Ferreri; Mario Tombini; F. Gilio; P. P. Quarato; Antonella Conte; Paolo Manganotti; Liugi Giuseppe Bongiovanni; Francesco Monaco; Daniela Ferrante; Paolo Maria Rossini

Summary:  Purpose: To assess the effectiveness of slow repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) as an adjunctive treatment for drug‐resistant epilepsy.


Experimental Brain Research | 2009

The serial reaction time task revisited: a study on motor sequence learning with an arm-reaching task

Clara Moisello; Domenica Crupi; Eugene Tunik; Angelo Quartarone; Marco Bove; Giulio Tononi; M. Felice Ghilardi

With a series of novel arm-reaching tasks, we have shown that visuomotor sequence learning encompasses the acquisition of the order of sequence elements, and the ability to combine them in a single, skilled behavior. The first component, which is mostly declarative, is reflected by changes in movement onset time (OT); the second, which occurs without subject’s awareness, is measured by changes in kinematic variables, including movement time (MT). Key-press-based serial reaction time tasks (SRTT) have been used to investigate sequence learning and results interpreted as indicative of the implicit acquisition of the sequence order. One limitation to SRT studies, however, is that only one measure is used, the response time, the sum of OT and MT: this makes interpretation of which component is learnt difficult and disambiguation of implicit and explicit processes problematic. Here, we used an arm-reaching version of SRTT to propose a novel interpretation of such results. The pattern of response time changes we obtained was similar to the key-press-based tasks. However, there were significant differences between OT and MT, suggesting that both partial learning of the sequence order and skill improvement took place. Further analyses indicated that the learning of the sequence order might not occur without subjects’ awareness.


Parkinsonism & Related Disorders | 2008

Implicit and explicit aspects of sequence learning in pre-symptomatic Huntington's disease

M.F. Ghilardi; Giulia Silvestri; Andrew Feigin; Paul Mattis; D. Zgaljardic; Clara Moisello; Domenica Crupi; Lucio Marinelli; A. DiRocco; David Eidelberg

Learning deficits may be part of the early symptoms of Huntingtons disease (HD). Here we characterized implicit and explicit aspects of sequence learning in 11 pre-symptomatic HD gene carriers (pHD) and 11 normal controls. Subjects moved a cursor on a digitizing tablet and performed the following tasks: SEQ: learning to anticipate the appearance of a target sequence in two blocks; VSEQ: learning a sequence by attending to the display without moving for one block, and by moving to the sequence in a successive block (VSEQ test). Explicit learning was measured with declarative scores and number of anticipatory movements. Implicit learning was measured as a strategy change reflected in movement time. By the end of SEQ, pHD had a significantly lower number of correct anticipatory movements and lower declarative scores than controls, while in VSEQ and VSEQ test these indices improved. During all three tasks, movement time changed in controls, but not in pHD. These results suggest that both explicit and implicit aspects of sequence learning may be impaired before the onset of motor symptoms. However, when attentional demands decrease, explicit, but not implicit, learning may improve.


Movement Disorders | 2005

Corticospinal Excitability During Motor Imagery of a Simple Tonic Finger Movement in Patients With Writer's Cramp

Angelo Quartarone; Sergio Bagnato; Vincenzo Rizzo; Francesca Morgante; Antonino Sant'Angelo; Domenica Crupi; Marcello Romano; C. Messina; Alfredo Berardelli; Paolo Girlanda

Motor imagery (MI) is the mental rehearsal of a motor act without overt movement. Using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), we tested the effect of MI on corticospinal excitability in patients with writers cramp. In 10 patients with writers cramp and 10 healthy controls, we applied focal TMS over each primary motor area and recorded motor evoked potentials (MEPs) from contralateral hand and arm muscles while participants imagined a tonic abduction of the index finger contralateral to the stimulated hemisphere. In healthy controls and patients, the MEP amplitude in the relaxed first dorsal interosseus muscle (FDI) showed a muscle‐specific increase during MI; however, the increase was less pronounced in patients than in healthy controls. In addition, in patients but not in controls, the MEP amplitude also increased in hand and forearm muscles not involved in the imagined movement. This abnormal spread of facilitation was observed in the affected and unaffected upper limb. MI of simple hand movements is less efficient and less focussed in patients with writers cramp than it is in normal subjects.


Muscle & Nerve | 2007

MOTOR CORTEX ABNORMALITIES IN AMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS WITH TRANSCRANIAL DIRECT-CURRENT STIMULATION

Angelo Quartarone; Nicolas Lang; Vincenzo Rizzo; Sergio Bagnato; Francesca Morgante; Antonino Sant'Angelo; Domenica Crupi; Fortunato Battaglia; C. Messina; Paolo Girlanda

The aim of this study was to identify a neurophysiological marker of upper motoneuron involvement in patients with sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). For this purpose we evaluated the after‐effects of transcranial direct‐current stimulation (tDCS) on excitability of the motor cortex of eight ALS patients and eight healthy controls. Healthy controls showed a transient polarity‐specific change in corticospinal excitability of about ±45%, with anodal tDCS inducing facilitation and cathodal tDCS leading to inhibition, whereas no change could be induced in ALS patients after either type of tDCS. It is likely that the lack of tDCS after‐effects in ALS is the result of alterations of the motoneuronal membrane or, alternatively, may represent an electrophysiological correlate of disordered glutamate neurotransmission. Further studies are warranted to confirm these results. The present findings may lead to a new, reliable electrophysiological marker of upper motoneuronal involvement in ALS. Muscle Nerve, 2007


Journal of Motor Behavior | 2013

Protracted exercise without overt neuromuscular fatigue influences cortical excitability.

Domenica Crupi; Giuseppe Cruciata; Clara Moisello; Paul Ann Green; Antonino Naro; Lucia Ricciardi; Bernardo Perfetti; Marco Bove; Laura Avanzino; Alessandro Di Rocco; Angelo Quartarone; M. Felice Ghilardi

ABSTRACT The authors’ aim was to determine the cortical mechanisms that underlie the transition from effective performance to its disruption. They thus used transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to study changes of corticospinal excitability after a motor exercise that did not produce overt or perceived neuromuscular fatigue. Forty-four subjects performed either 5 or 10 min of repetitive finger movements paced by tones at 2 Hz, a frequency below the spontaneous movement rate. Changes of corticospinal excitability were assessed with TMS at rest and during motor response preparation (premovement facilitation paradigm). Over time, variability of movement rate increased, while the average movement rate shifted toward self-paced rhythms, without significant changes in other kinematic parameters. Amplitudes of motor evoked potentials at rest decreased depending on task duration and TMS intensity. Moreover, 5-min exercise induced fully compensatory increases in premovement facilitation, while 10-min exercise produced partially compensatory increases with loss of temporal modulation. Our findings suggest that protracted exercise induces significant decrements in corticospinal excitability with initial impairment of the phasic motor neurons that are recruited at higher stimulus intensities. Changes in premovement facilitation likely represent compensation of premotor areas for decreased efficiency of the primary motor cortex induced by exercise.


Brain Stimulation | 2014

Increased Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation After Effects During Concurrent Peripheral Electrical Nerve Stimulation

Vincenzo Rizzo; C. Terranova; Domenica Crupi; Antonino Sant'Angelo; Paolo Girlanda; A. Quartarone

In this study we tested the hypothesis whether a lasting change in the excitability of cortical output circuits can be obtained in healthy humans by combining a peripheral nerve stimulation during a concomitant depolarization and/or hyperpolarization of motor cortex. To reach this aim we combined two different neurophysiological techniques each of them able to induce a lasting increase of cortical excitability by them self: namely median nerve repetitive electrical stimulation (rEPNS) and transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS). Ten normal young volunteers were enrolled in the present study. All subjects underwent five different protocols of stimulation: (1, 2) tDCS alone (anodal or cathodal); (3) Sham tDCS plus rEPNS; (4, 5) anodal or cathodal tDCS plus rEPNS. The baseline MEP amplitude from abductor pollicis brevis (APB) and flexor carpi radialis (FCR) muscle, the FCR H-reflex were compared with that obtained immediately after and 10, 20, 30, 60 min after the stimulation protocol. Anodal tDCS alone induced a significant transient increase of MEP amplitude immediately after the end of stimulation while anodal tDCS + rEPNS determined MEP changes which persisted for up 60 min. Cathodal tDCS alone induced a significant reduction of MEP amplitude immediately after the end of stimulation while cathodal tDCS + rEPNS prolonged the effects for up to 60 min. Sham tDCS + rEPNS did not induce significant changes in corticospinal excitability. Anodal or cathodal tDCS + rEPNS and sham tDCS + rEPNS caused a lasting facilitation of H-reflex. These findings suggest that by providing afferent input to the motor cortex while its excitability level is increased or decreased by tDCS may be a highly effective means for inducing an enduring bi-directional plasticity. The mechanism of this protocol may be complex, involving either cortical and spinal after effects.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2011

Associative cortico-cortical plasticity may affect ipsilateral finger opposition movements.

Vincenzo Rizzo; Marco Bove; Antonino Naro; A. Tacchino; C. Mastroeni; Laura Avanzino; Domenica Crupi; Francesca Morgante; H.R. Siebner; A. Quartarone

We have recently demonstrated that cortico-cortical paired associative stimulation (cc-PAS) can modulate interhemispheric inhibition (IHI) in the human brain. Here we further explored the after effects of cc-PAS on fine hand movements. Ten healthy right-handed volunteers received 90 paired transcranial stimuli to the right and left primary motor hand area (M1(HAND)) at an interstimulus interval (ISI) of 8 ms. We studied the after effects of cc-PAS on the performance of repetitive finger opposition movements of different complexity on both hands using a sensor-engineered glove. A quantitative evaluation of the following parameters was performed: Touch Duration (TD), Inter Tapping Interval (ITI) and Number of Errors (NE). We confirmed previous data by showing that left-to-right and right-to-left cc-PAS attenuated IHI. The new finding is that both left-to-right and right-to-left cc-PAS were able to influence the performance of a simple finger opposition movement changing the duration of TD and ITI. Interestingly the effect on the two hands was opposite in direction. These results provide further insight that cc-PAS can induce associative plasticity in connections between the targeted cortical areas influencing motor hand performances. These results may be relevant for future rehabilitative applications.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2008

Neural response to transcranial magnetic stimulation in adult hypothyroidism and effect of replacement treatment

Vincenzo Rizzo; Domenica Crupi; Sergio Bagnato; Angelo Quartarone; Salvatore Benvenga; L. Bartolone; M. Felice Ghilardi; Francesco Trimarchi; Paolo Girlanda; Fortunato Battaglia

PURPOSE Despite clinical evidences that hypothyroidism is often associated with cognitive dysfunction, affective disorders and psychosis, the effects of thyroid hormone deficiency on the adult brain have been largely unexplored. We investigated the hypothesis that hypothyroidism might affect cortical excitability and modulates inhibitory and excitatory cortical circuits by using Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation. MATERIALS AND METHODS Cortical excitability was probed in 10 patients with overt hypothyroidism and 10 age-matched healthy controls. We tested motor thresholds and corticospinal excitability, cortical silent period and peripheral silent period, short interval intracortical inhibition, intracortical facilitation. Patients were evaluated at the time of diagnosis, as well as after 3 and 6 months replacement therapy with l-thyroxin. RESULTS At baseline, patients showed decreased cortical excitability, with increased resting and active motor threshold and decreased steepness of the motor evoked potential recruitment curves. These changes were paralleled by longer cortical silent period and decreased short interval intracortical inhibition. After 3 months replacement therapy, all the parameters but short interval intracortical inhibition were restored to normal values. Short interval intracortical inhibition returned to normal values only after 6 months of replacement therapy. CONCLUSIONS Thyroid hormones are needed to modulate cortical excitability and cortical inhibitory circuits in adults.

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Clara Moisello

City University of New York

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M. Felice Ghilardi

City University of New York

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