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Dive into the research topics where Franco Granella is active.

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Featured researches published by Franco Granella.


Cephalalgia | 2003

Course of Migraine During Pregnancy and Postpartum: A Prospective Study

Grazia Sances; Franco Granella; Rossella E. Nappi; Alessia Fignon; Natascia Ghiotto; Franco Polatti; Giuseppe Nappi

The aim of this study was to investigate prospectively the course of migraine during pregnancy and postpartum. Of all the pregnant women consecutively attending an obstetrics and gynaecology department for a routine first-trimester antenatal check-up, 49 migraine sufferers - two were affected by migraine with aura (MA) and 47 by migraine without aura (MO) - who had experienced at least one attack during the 3 months preceding pregnancy were identified, enrolled in the study and given a headache diary. Subsequent examinations were performed at the end of the second and third trimesters and 1 month after delivery. Migraine was seen to improve in 46.8% of the 47 MO sufferers during the first trimester, in 83.0% during the second and in 87.2% during the third, while complete remission was attained by 10.6%, 53.2%, and 78.7% of the women, respectively. Migraine recurred during the first week after childbirth in 34.0% of the women and during the first month in 55.3%. Certain risk factors for lack of improvement of migraine during pregnancy were identified: the presence of menstrually related migraine before pregnancy was associated with a lack of headache improvement in the first and third trimesters, while second-trimester hyperemesis, and a pathological pregnancy course were associated with a lack of headache improvement in the second trimester. Breast feeding seemed to protect from migraine recurrence during postpartum.


Cephalalgia | 2004

Characteristics of Menstrual and Nonmenstrual Attacks in Women with Menstrually Related Migraine Referred to Headache Centres

Franco Granella; Grazia Sances; G. Allais; Rossella E. Nappi; A Tirelli; Chiara Benedetto; Benedetta Brundu; Fabio Facchinetti; Giuseppe Nappi

Aim of this study was to determine whether menstrual attacks differ from non-menstrual attacks (NMA) as regards clinical features or response to abortive treatment in women affected by menstrually related migraine (MRM) referred to tertiary care centres. Sixty-four women with MRM were enrolled in a 2-month diary study. Perimenstrual attacks were split into three groups – premenstrual (PMA), menstrual (MA) and late menstrual (LMA) – and compared to nonmenstrual ones. Perimenstrual attacks were significantly longer than NMA. No other migraine attack features were found to differ between the various phases of the cycle. Migraine work-related disability was significantly greater in PMA and MA than in NMA. Acute attack treatment was less effective in perimenstrual attacks. Pain-free at 2 h after dosage was achieved in 13.5% of MA (OR 0.41; 95% CI 0.22, 0.76) vs. 32.9% of NMA. We concluded that, in MRM, perimenstrual attacks are longer and less responsive to acute attack treatment than NMA.


Headache | 1990

Double blind comparison of lithium and verapamil in cluster headache prophylaxis

Gennaro Bussone; M. Leone; C. Peccarisi; Giuseppe Micieli; Franco Granella; M. Magri; Gian Camillo Manzoni; Giuseppe Nappi

SYNOPSIS


Maturitas | 1993

Characteristics of headache at menopause: A clinico-epidemiologic study

Isabella Neri; Franco Granella; Rossella E. Nappi; G.C. Manzoni; Fabio Facchinetti; A. R. Genazzani

The prevalence and characteristics of primary headaches in a large sample of postmenopausal women were investigated. Seventy-six out of 556 women (13.7%) were affected by headache of either the migraine or tension type. In 82% of cases onset had preceded the menopause. The postmenopausal course of headaches with a premenopausal onset differed according to type of headache and type of menopause. Indeed, while migraine improved in almost two-thirds of cases, tension-type headache worsened or did not change in 70% of cases. However, in women who had undergone surgical ovariectomy, the natural course of migraine was worse than in those who had a physiological menopause (P = 0.003). Among the symptoms covered by the Kuppermann Index, only anxiety and insomnia were correlated with headache. The favourable course of migraine in the postmenopausal period can be attributed primarily to the absence of variations in sex hormone levels although psychological factors also seem to play a fundamental role.


Cephalalgia | 2000

Migraine with Aura and Reproductive Life Events: A Case Control Study

Franco Granella; Grazia Sances; Ennio Pucci; Re Nappi; Natascia Ghiotto; G. Nappi

The course of migraine without aura (MO) is greatly influenced by the events of female reproductive life. Much less is known about migraine with aura (MA). The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between MA and the milestones of reproductive life. A retrospective case control study was carried out on 100 women affected by migraine with typical aura (cases) and 200 age-matched women with MO (controls). Pre-menstrual syndrome was found to be much more common among the patients with MA (odds ratio (OR) 6.0; confidence interval (CI) 3.1–11.6). Menstrually triggered migraine was more frequently encountered among MO than among MA patients (MA 15.0%; MO 53.5%; OR 0.1; CI 0.1–0.3). In both forms of migraine, pregnancy had a favourable effect; however, a lower percentage of MA (43.6%) than MO patients (76.8%; OR 0.2; CI 0.1–0.5) showed improvement or remission. The use of oral contraceptives worsened migraine in MA more frequently than in MO patients (MA 56.4%; MO 25.3%; OR 3.8; CI 1.6–9.3). The course of MA seems to be influenced by female reproductive life events, but in a different way with respect to MO.


Cephalalgia | 1991

Cluster Headache Course Over Ten Years in 189 Patients

Gian Camillo Manzoni; Giuseppe Micieli; Franco Granella; Cristina Tassorelli; Carla Zanferrari; Anna Cavallini

One-hundred-and-eighty-nine cluster headache patients, referred to Parma and Pavia Headache Centres between 1976 and 1986 with a disease duration of over 10 years, were interviewed about the course of cluster headache. They were classified as episodic (n = 140) or chronic (n = 49) cluster headache patients on the basis of course during the year of onset. Episodic patients showed the following outcome: maintenance of an episodic form (primary episodic form) in 80.7% of cases, shift towards a chronic form (secondary chronic form) in 12.9% and shift towards an intermediate pattern (“combined” form) in 6.4%. In chronic patients, cluster headache was still chronic (primary chronic form) at the moment of observation in 52.4% of cases, while it turned into an episodic form (“secondary” episodic form) in 32.6% and into a “combined” form in 14.3%. Nineteen patients (10%) had had no attacks for at least three years at the moment of examination. We can conclude from our data that: cluster headache is a disease of long duration, perhaps lifelong; episodic cluster headache tends to worsen; chronic cluster headache may easily turn into a better prognostic episodic form; prophylactic drugs are unable to induce recovery. The following factors seem related to a poor outcome: a later onset, the male gender and a disease duration of over 20 years for the episodic forms.


Cephalalgia | 1995

Classification of chronic daily headache by International Headache Society criteria : limits and new proposals

Gian Camillo Manzoni; Franco Granella; G Sandrini; A Cavallini; Carla Zanferrari; Giuseppe Nappi

We conducted a retrospective study of 150 patients with chronic daily headache (CDH) to determine how to categorize their headache according to the classification of the International Headache Society (IHS). All patients were first evaluated at Parma and Pavia Headache Centres (from January 1992 to March 1993) and had had headache for at least 15 days a month during the previous 6 months. Four patients were thereafter excluded due to poor reliability. The 146 patients who met our CDH criteria (92 with and 54 without clear-cut migraine attacks) could be classified into four groups: (i) chronic tension-type headache (CTTH)-27 patients; (ii) coexisting migraine plus CTTH-65 patients; (iii) unclassifiable daily headache-27 patients; and (iv) migraine and an unclassifiable interval headache-27 patients. Seventy-two percent of patients with CDH had migraine as the initial form of their headache. We therefore propose to revise the IHS classification for migraine, taking into account its evolution, and add two subcategories, migraine with interparoxysmal headache and chronic migraine.


Neurology | 2001

Lamotrigine in the treatment of SUNCT syndrome.

Giovanni D'Andrea; Franco Granella; Natascia Ghiotto; Giuseppe Nappi

Short-lasting, unilateral, neuralgiform headache attacks with conjunctival injection and tearing (SUNCT) is considered an intractable condition. The authors treated five patients with lamotrigine (125 to 200 mg daily), obtaining a complete remission in three patients and a substantial reduction (about 80%) of attack frequency in the other two. No adverse effects were noted.


Cephalalgia | 2000

The Effect of Intranasal Cocaine and Lidocaine on Nitroglycerin‐Induced Attacks in Cluster Headache

Alfredo Costa; Ennio Pucci; Fabio Antonaci; Grazia Sances; Franco Granella; G Broich; G. Nappi

The administration of nitroderivatives in cluster headache (CH) sufferers is the most reproducible experimental paradigm to induce spontaneous‐like pain attacks. Previous uncontrolled studies have reported that the local use of anaesthetic agents in the area of the sphenopalatine fossa is able to extinguish nitroglycerin (NTG)‐induced pain in CH. The present study, carried out according to a double‐blind placebo‐controlled design, included 15 CH patients, six with episodic CH (mean ± sd age of 36.8 ± 5.6 years), and nine with chronic CH (37.8 ± 10.4 years). Patients had undergone a standard NTG test (0.9 mg sublingually), during which the intensity of pain was scored using a visuo‐analogic scale (VAS, range 0–10). Nine patients (two with the episodic form, seven with the chronic form) experienced a typical, spontaneous‐like attack on the usual side, occurring in all cases within 45 min. In these patients, the test was repeated with an interval of 2 days, and once pain intensity reached 5 on the VAS, a 10% solution of cocaine hydrochloride (1 ml, mean amount per application 40–50 mg), or 10% lidocaine (1 ml), or saline was applied using a cotton swab in the area corresponding to the sphenopalatine fossa, under anterior rhinoscopy. This was done in both the symptomatic and the non‐symptomatic side, for 5 min. Treatments were always performed randomly, in separate sessions. All patients responded promptly to both anaesthetic agents, with complete cessation of induced pain occurring after 31.3 ± 13.1 min for cocaine and 37.0 ± 7.8 min for lidocaine (M ± sd). In the case of saline application, pain severity increased thereafter, and extinction of the provoked attacks occurred with a latency of 59.3 ± 12.3 min (P < 0.01 and P < 0.01 vs. cocaine and lidocaine, respectively, Mann–Whitney U‐test). While further suggesting that the sphenopalatine ganglion participates in the mechanisms of pain, these findings indicate that the local administration of the anaesthetic agents cocaine and lidocaine is effective on NTG‐induced CH attacks, and may be used in the symptomatic treatment of this disorder.


Neurology | 2004

Elevated levels of circulating trace amines in primary headaches

Giovanni D'Andrea; S. Terrazzino; A. Leon; D. Fortin; F. Perini; Franco Granella; Gennaro Bussone

Background: Trace amines, including tyramine, octopamine, and synephrine, are closely related to classic biogenic amines. They have been hypothesized to promote migraines and other types of primary headaches, but there is no direct evidence supporting this hypothesis. Methods: Using a multichannel electrochemical high-performance liquid chromatography system, the authors evaluated whether changes in circulating trace amines occur in subjects with migraine (with or without aura) during headache-free periods as well as in patients with cluster headache (CH) during the remission and active phases as compared with healthy control subjects. Results: Plasma levels of all trace amines were significantly higher in CH patients, in both the remission and the active phases, when compared with control subjects or subjects with migraine. In addition, intraplatelet levels of octopamine, synephrine, and tyramine were higher in CH patients than in control subjects. In migraine patients, plasma levels of octopamine and synephrine were higher compared with controls, although in migraine with aura, the difference was not significant. Conclusions: Whereas the elevation of plasma trace amine levels in both migraine and CH supports the hypothesis that disorders of biogenic amine metabolism may be a characteristic biochemical trait in primary headache sufferers, the observation that such alterations are more prominent in patients with CH than migraine patients suggests that they may reflect sympathetic or hypothalamic dysfunction.

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Patrizia Sola

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Eva Havrdova

Charles University in Prague

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Marc Girard

Université de Montréal

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