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Dive into the research topics where Elena Freri is active.

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Featured researches published by Elena Freri.


Neurology | 2003

Experience with immunomodulatory treatments in Rasmussen’s encephalitis

Tiziana Granata; Lucia Fusco; Giuseppe Gobbi; Elena Freri; Francesca Ragona; Giovanni Broggi; Renato Mantegazza; Lucio Giordano; Flavio Villani; Giuseppe Capovilla; Federico Vigevano; B. Dalla Bernardina; Roberto Spreafico; Carlo Antozzi

The authors investigated immunomodulatory treatments in 15 patients with Rasmussen encephalitis (RE) (14 with childhood and one with adolescent onset RE). Positive time-limited responses were obtained in 11 patients using variable combinations of corticosteroids, apheresis, and high-dose IV immunoglobulins. Although surgical exclusion of the affected hemisphere is the only treatment that halts disease progression, immunomodulation can be considered when early surgery is not feasible, in late-onset patients with slower disease progression, and in the few cases of bilateral disease.


Neurology | 2003

Rasmussen's encephalitis: Early characteristics allow diagnosis

Tiziana Granata; Giuseppe Gobbi; Roberto Spreafico; Federico Vigevano; Giuseppe Capovilla; Francesca Ragona; Elena Freri; Luisa Chiapparini; Pia Bernasconi; Lucio Giordano; G. Bertani; Marina Casazza; B. Dalla Bernardina; Lucia Fusco

Objective: To identify early manifestations of Rasmussen encephalitis (RE) that can prompt early and reasonably secure diagnosis, allowing medical or surgical therapies at an early stage when they may be more effective in slowing the disease. Methods: The authors studied 12 patients with clinical and neuropathologic diagnosis of RE, followed from disease onset, assessing clinical history, imaging, and EEG and focusing on early characteristics. Anti-GluR3 antibody assays were also considered in 11 patients. Results: By 4 months from first symptoms, all cases had 1) refractory focal seizures with a predominant motor component, 2) slow focal activity on EEG contralateral to the motor manifestations, and 3) focal contralateral white matter hyperintensity with insular cortical atrophy on neuroimaging. Less constant or later findings were epilepsia partialis continua, oligoclonal bands, and serum anti-GluR3 antibodies. Conclusions: The association of partial seizures with focal EEG and neuroimaging changes allows a tentative diagnosis of RE 4 to 6 months after first symptoms.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Efficacy of Anti-Inflammatory Therapy in a Model of Acute Seizures and in a Population of Pediatric Drug Resistant Epileptics

Nicola Marchi; Tiziana Granata; Elena Freri; Emilio Ciusani; Francesca Ragona; Vikram Puvenna; Quingshan Teng; Andreas Alexopolous; Damir Janigro

Targeting pro-inflammatory events to reduce seizures is gaining momentum. Experimentally, antagonism of inflammatory processes and of blood-brain barrier (BBB) damage has been demonstrated to be beneficial in reducing status epilepticus (SE). Clinically, a role of inflammation in the pathophysiology of drug resistant epilepsies is suspected. However, the use anti-inflammatory drug such as glucocorticosteroids (GCs) is limited to selected pediatric epileptic syndromes and spasms. Lack of animal data may be one of the reasons for the limited use of GCs in epilepsy. We evaluated the effect of the CG dexamethasone in reducing the onset and the severity of pilocarpine SE in rats. We assessed BBB integrity by measuring serum S100β and Evans Blue brain extravasation. Electrophysiological monitoring and hematologic measurements (WBCs and IL-1β) were performed. We reviewed the effect of add on dexamethasone treatment on a population of pediatric patients affected by drug resistant epilepsy. We excluded subjects affected by West, Landau-Kleffner or Lennox-Gastaut syndromes and Rasmussen encephalitis, known to respond to GCs or adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH). The effect of two additional GCs, methylprednisolone and hydrocortisone, was also reviewed in this population. When dexamethasone treatment preceded exposure to the convulsive agent pilocarpine, the number of rats developing status epilepticus (SE) was reduced. When SE developed, the time-to-onset was significantly delayed compared to pilocarpine alone and mortality associated with pilocarpine-SE was abolished. Dexamethasone significantly protected the BBB from damage. The clinical study included pediatric drug resistant epileptic subjects receiving add on GC treatments. Decreased seizure frequency (≥50%) or interruption of status epilepticus was observed in the majority of the subjects, regardless of the underlying pathology. Our experimental results point to a seizure-reducing effect of dexamethasone. The mechanism encompasses improvement of BBB integrity. Our results also suggest that add on GCs could be of efficacy in controlling pediatric drug resistant seizures.


Epilepsia | 2006

Periventricular Nodular Heterotopia: Classification, Epileptic History, and Genesis of Epileptic Discharges

Giorgio Battaglia; Luisa Chiapparini; Silvana Franceschetti; Elena Freri; Laura Tassi; Stefania Bassanini; Flavio Villani; Roberto Spreafico; Ludovico D'Incerti; Tiziana Granata

Summary:  Purpose. Periventricular nodular heterotopia (PNH) is among the most common malformations of cortical development, and affected patients are frequently characterized by focal drug‐resistant epilepsy. Here we analyzed clinical, MRI, and electrophysiologic findings in 54 PNH patients to reevaluate the classification of PNH, relate the anatomic features to epileptic outcome, and ascertain the contribution of PNH nodules to the onset of epileptic discharges.


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.


Brain & Development | 2010

Dravet syndrome: Early clinical manifestations and cognitive outcome in 37 Italian patients

Francesca Ragona; Daniela Brazzo; Ilaria De Giorgi; Monica Morbi; Elena Freri; Federica Teutonico; Elena Gennaro; Federico Zara; Simona Binelli; Pierangelo Veggiotti; Tiziana Granata

Aims of our study were to describe the early clinical features of Dravet syndrome (SMEI) and the neurological, cognitive and behavioral outcome. The clinical history of 37 patients with clinical diagnosis of SMEI, associated with a point mutation of SCN1A gene in 84% of cases, were reviewed with particular attention to the symptoms of onset. All the patients received at least one formal cognitive and behavior evaluation. Epilepsy started at a mean age of 5.7 months; the onset was marked by isolated seizure in 25 infants, and by status epilepticus in 12; the first seizure had been triggered by fever, mostly of low degree in 22 infants; the first EEG was normal in all cases. During the second year of life difficult-to-treat seizures recurred, mostly triggered by fever, hot bath, and intermittent lights and delay in psychomotor development became evident. At the last evaluation, performed at a mean age of 16+/-6.9 years, mental retardation was present in 33 patients, associated with behavior disorders in 21. Our data indicate that the most striking features of SMEI are: the early onset of seizures in a previously healthy child, the long duration of the first seizure, the presence of focal ictal symptoms, and sensitivity to low-grade fever. Diagnosis of SMEI may be proposed by the end of the first year of life, and a definite diagnosis can be established during the second year based on the peculiar seizure-favoring factors, EEG photosensitivity and psychomotor slowing. The temporal correlation between high seizure frequency and cognitive impairment support the role of epilepsy in the clinical outcome, even if a role of channelopathy cannot be ruled out.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2004

Schizencephaly: Clinical spectrum, epilepsy, and pathogenesis

Tiziana Granata; Elena Freri; Claudio Caccia; Veronica Setola; Franco Taroni; Giorgio Battaglia

After almost 60 years since the original description, we have reviewed the results of the more recent studies on schizencephaly in an attempt to delineate its imaging and clinical spectra of presentation and to point out the still unsettled controversies on its pathogenesis. The clinical picture is mainly based on the presence of motor deficits and mental retardation, but the severity of the clinical picture is extremely variable, mainly related to the size and location of the clefts and to the presence of associated cerebral malformations. By contrast, the outcome of epilepsy, which is present in about half of the cases and drug resistant in a third, is not strictly related to the severity of the malformation. Some clinical and functional magnetic resonance imaging studies have suggested that, beside the features of the anatomic damage, the functional reorganization of a malformed and unaffected cortex is most likely crucial in determining the clinical outcome. Review of the genetic studies and the more recent personal data suggests that the role of the EMX2 gene in schizencephaly, if any, is restricted to a minority of cases, leaving the etiopathogenesis of this brain malformation still a matter of study and debate. (J Child Neurol 2005;20:313—318).


JAMA Neurology | 2012

Clinical Significance of Rare Copy Number Variations in Epilepsy A Case-Control Survey Using Microarray-Based Comparative Genomic Hybridization

Pasquale Striano; Antonietta Coppola; Roberta Paravidino; Michela Malacarne; Stefania Gimelli; Angela Robbiano; Monica Traverso; Marianna Pezzella; Vincenzo Belcastro; Amedeo Bianchi; Maurizio Elia; Antonio Falace; Elisabetta Gazzerro; Edoardo Ferlazzo; Elena Freri; Roberta Galasso; Giuseppe Gobbi; Cristina Molinatto; Simona Cavani; Orsetta Zuffardi; Salvatore Striano; Giovanni Battista Ferrero; Margherita Silengo; Maria Luigia Cavaliere; Matteo Benelli; Alberto Magi; Maria Piccione; Franca Dagna Bricarelli; Domenico Coviello; Marco Fichera

OBJECTIVE To perform an extensive search for genomic rearrangements by microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization in patients with epilepsy. DESIGN Prospective cohort study. SETTING Epilepsy centers in Italy. PATIENTS Two hundred seventy-nine patients with unexplained epilepsy, 265 individuals with nonsyndromic mental retardation but no epilepsy, and 246 healthy control subjects were screened by microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Identification of copy number variations (CNVs) and gene enrichment. RESULTS Rare CNVs occurred in 26 patients (9.3%) and 16 healthy control subjects (6.5%) (P = .26). The CNVs identified in patients were larger (P = .03) and showed higher gene content (P = .02) than those in control subjects. The CNVs larger than 1 megabase (P = .002) and including more than 10 genes (P = .005) occurred more frequently in patients than in control subjects. Nine patients (34.6%) among those harboring rare CNVs showed rearrangements associated with emerging microdeletion or microduplication syndromes. Mental retardation and neuropsychiatric features were associated with rare CNVs (P = .004), whereas epilepsy type was not. The CNV rate in patients with epilepsy and mental retardation or neuropsychiatric features is not different from that observed in patients with mental retardation only. Moreover, significant enrichment of genes involved in ion transport was observed within CNVs identified in patients with epilepsy. CONCLUSIONS Patients with epilepsy show a significantly increased burden of large, rare, gene-rich CNVs, particularly when associated with mental retardation and neuropsychiatric features. The limited overlap between CNVs observed in the epilepsy group and those observed in the group with mental retardation only as well as the involvement of specific (ion channel) genes indicate a specific association between the identified CNVs and epilepsy. Screening for CNVs should be performed for diagnostic purposes preferentially in patients with epilepsy and mental retardation or neuropsychiatric features.


Epilepsia | 2006

Familial Occurrence of Febrile Seizures and Epilepsy in Severe Myoclonic Epilepsy of Infancy (SMEI) Patients with SCN1A Mutations

Maria Margherita Mancardi; Pasquale Striano; Elena Gennaro; Francesca Madia; Roberta Paravidino; Sara Scapolan; Bernardo Dalla Bernardina; Enrico Bertini; Amedeo Bianchi; Giuseppe Capovilla; Francesca Darra; Maurizio Elia; Elena Freri; Giuseppe Gobbi; Tiziana Granata; Renzo Guerrini; Chiara Pantaleoni; Antonia Parmeggiani; Antonino Romeo; Margherita Santucci; Marilena Vecchi; Pierangelo Veggiotti; Federico Vigevano; Angela Pistorio; Roberto Gaggero; Federico Zara

Summary:  Purpose: The role of the familial background in severe myoclonic epilepsy of infancy (SMEI) has been traditionally emphasized in literature, with 25–70% of the patients having a family history of febrile seizures (FS) or epilepsy. We explored the genetic background of SMEI patients carrying SCN1A mutations to further shed light on the genetics of this disorder.


Annals of Neurology | 2016

Type II focal cortical dysplasia: Ex vivo 7T magnetic resonance imaging abnormalities and histopathological comparisons

Ileana Zucca; Gloria Milesi; Valentina Medici; Laura Tassi; Giuseppe Didato; Francesco Cardinale; Giovanni Tringali; Nadia Colombo; Manuela Bramerio; Ludovico D'Incerti; Elena Freri; Michela Morbin; Valeria Fugnanesi; Matteo Figini; Roberto Spreafico; Rita Garbelli

In the present report, the correlations between ex vivo high‐resolution imaging and specific histological and ultrastructural patterns in type II focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) have been studied to explain the differences in the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) detection of dysplasia and to contribute to the presurgical imaging evaluation of this pathology.

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Tiziana Granata

Carlo Besta Neurological Institute

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Francesca Ragona

Carlo Besta Neurological Institute

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Silvana Franceschetti

Carlo Besta Neurological Institute

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Sara Matricardi

University of Chieti-Pescara

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Simona Binelli

Carlo Besta Neurological Institute

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Federico Vigevano

Boston Children's Hospital

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Lucia Fusco

Boston Children's Hospital

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Nicola Specchio

Boston Children's Hospital

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Laura Canafoglia

Carlo Besta Neurological Institute

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