Giovanna Calandra-Buonaura
University of Bologna
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Publication
Featured researches published by Giovanna Calandra-Buonaura.
Neurological Sciences | 2005
C. A. Tassinari; Guido Rubboli; E. Gardella; Gaetano Cantalupo; Giovanna Calandra-Buonaura; M. Vedovello; M. Alessandria; G. Gandini; S. Cinotti; N. Zamponi; Stefano Meletti
Central pattern generators (CPGs) are genetically determined neuronal aggregates in the mesencephalon, pons and spinal cord subserving innate motor behaviours essential for survival (feeding, locomotion, reproduction etc.). In higher primates CPGs are largely under neocortical control. We describe how certain motor events observed in parasomnias and epileptic seizures could have similar features and resemble motor behaviours, which can be the expression of the same CPG. Both epilepsy and sleep can lead to a temporary loss of control of neomammalian cortex that facilitates through a common platform (arousal) the emergences of stereotyped inborn fixed action patterns. Therefore we suggest that, independently from the nature of the trigger, be it a seizure or a parasomnia, the same CPGs can be involved, “caught up”, leading to a common motor semiology (the “Carillon theory”).
Brain Research Bulletin | 2004
Francesca Benuzzi; Stefano Meletti; Giovanna Zamboni; Giovanna Calandra-Buonaura; Marco Serafini; Fausta Lui; Patrizia Baraldi; Guido Rubboli; C. A. Tassinari; Paolo Nichelli
Lesion and neuroimaging studies have demonstrated that the mesial temporal lobe is crucial for recognizing emotions from facial expressions. In humans, bilateral amygdala damage is followed by impaired recognition of facial expressions of fear. To evaluate the influence of unilateral mesial temporal lobe damage we examined recognition of facial expressions and functional magnetic resonance (fMRI) brain activation associated with incidental processing of fearful faces in thirteen mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) patients (eight with right MTLE, five with left MTLE). We also examined the effect of early versus later damage, comparing subjects with hippocampal-amygdalar sclerosis (MTS) and seizures occurring before five years of age to epilepsy patients with late onset seizures. Fourteen healthy volunteers participated as controls. Neuropsychological testing demonstrated that the ability of right MTLE patients to recognize fearful facial expressions is impaired. Patients with early onset of seizures were the most severely impaired. This deficit was associated with defective activation of a neural network involved in the processing of fearful expressions, which in controls and left MTLE included the left inferior frontal cortex and several occipito-temporal structures of both hemispheres.
Movement Disorders | 2009
Federica Provini; Elena Antelmi; Luca Vignatelli; A. Zaniboni; Giulia Naldi; Giovanna Calandra-Buonaura; Roberto Vetrugno; Giuseppe Plazzi; Pasquale Montagna
We investigated the prevalence of nocturnal eating (sleep‐related eating disorder—SRED or night‐eating syndrome—NES) in patients with restless legs syndrome (RLS). One hundred RLS patients living in Emilia‐Romagna (Northern Italy) and 100 matched controls randomly selected from the general population received two telephone interviews, and were investigated for socio‐demographic characteristics, general health status, and presence of nocturnaleating. Additionally, subjects underwent interviews for psychopathological traits [by means of the Eating Disorder Inventory‐2 (EDI‐2), the Maudsley Obsessive‐Compulsive Inventory (MOCI), the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI)], excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS), and subjective sleep quality. Compared with controls, RLS patients had more frequently pathological MOCI scores (24% versus 10%, P = 0.03), used significantly more drugs for concomitant diseases and had more nocturnal sleep impairment and EDS. SRED was more prevalent in RLS patients than controls (SRED: 33% versus 1%, P < 0.001). Medication use and pathological MOCI scores were more prevalent in RLS patients with SRED than among RLS patients without SRED. Use of dopaminergic or hypnotic drugs for RLS was not correlated with the presence of SRED. We demonstrate an association between RLS and SRED. Prospective studies are needed to establish the mechanisms underlying such association and whether it is causal.
Epilepsia | 2005
C. A. Tassinari; Laura Tassi; Giovanna Calandra-Buonaura; Michelangelo Stanzani-Maserati; Nicola Fini; Fabio Pizza; Ivana Sartori; Roberto Michelucci; Giorgio Lo Russo; Stefano Meletti
Summary:u2002 Purpose: To describe the semiologic features of aggressive behaviors observed in human epileptic seizures with particular reference to the act of biting a conspecific.
Sleep Medicine | 2010
Federica Provini; Elena Antelmi; Luca Vignatelli; A. Zaniboni; G. Naldi; Giovanna Calandra-Buonaura; Roberto Vetrugno; Giuseppe Plazzi; Fabio Pizza; Pasquale Montagna
OBJECTIVEnWe investigated the prevalence of nocturnal smoking (NS) in patients with RLS.nnnMETHODSnOne hundred RLS patients living in Emilia-Romagna (Northern Italy) and 100 matched controls, randomly selected from the general population, underwent interviews for the presence of nocturnal smoking and for obsessive-compulsive traits, depression, excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS) and subjective sleep quality.nnnRESULTSnNS was more prevalent in RLS patients than controls (lifetime prevalence: 12% vs. 2%, P=0.012). Patients with NS had more frequently Sleep-Related Eating Disorders (SRED) than patients without NS (83.3% vs. 26.1%, P=0.0002). Pathological and borderline Maudsley Obsessive-Compulsive Inventory (MOCI) values as well as pathological values at the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) increased from controls to RLS patients without NS to RLS patients with NS (P=0.005 and P=0.01, respectively).nnnCONCLUSIONSnWe demonstrate an increased prevalence of NS in patients with RLS, in many cases associated with increased SRED. NS may be associated with psychopathological traits in RLS and may be relevant in the management of RLS patients.
Sleep Medicine | 2011
Pietro Guaraldi; Giovanna Calandra-Buonaura; Rossana Terlizzi; Pasquale Montagna; Elio Lugaresi; Paolo Tinuper; Pietro Cortelli; Federica Provini
Agrypnia excitata (AE) is a syndrome characterized by the inability to sleep associated with a generalized motor and autonomic over-activation. AE is caused by a thalamo-limbic system dysfunction and comprises three different conditions: Fatal Familial Insomnia (FFI), Delirium Tremens (DT), and Morvan Syndrome (MS). Oneiric Stupor episodes (OS) are the peculiar motor behaviour of AE. During OS patients perform simple automatic gestures mimicking daily-life activities. This paper is the first description of the different characteristics of OS in two patients with MS and another with FFI, emphasizing the specific clinical features that reliably differentiate OS from REM sleep behaviour disorders.
Sleep Medicine | 2011
Stefano Zanigni; Giovanna Calandra-Buonaura; Daniela Grimaldi; Pietro Cortelli
Rapid-eye movement (REM) sleep behaviour disorder (RBD) is an REM sleep parasomnia characterized by enactment of dream content during REM sleep associated with loss of muscle atonia. RBD can be either idiopathic or secondary to drugs or other diseases. The best recognized association is with neurodegenerative diseases, namely alpha-synucleinopathies. RBD may represent the first feature of neurodegeneration and can be considered an early marker of these disorders. This review describes the main clinical, pathogenetic, and therapeutic features of RBD, pointing to its association with neurodegenerative diseases and emphasizing the clinical and prognostic implications.
Brain Research Bulletin | 2005
Roberto Padovani; Giovanna Calandra-Buonaura; Cristina Cacciari; Francesca Benuzzi; Paolo Nichelli
The grammatical gender of a word is a lexical-syntactic property determining agreement among different sentence parts. Recent fMRI investigations identified the areas involved in the retrieval of grammatical gender near the left Brocas area providing further evidence to confirm the preeminent syntactic role of this area. However, these studies employed categorical designs based on the controversial methodology of the cognitive subtraction of neural activations related to different tasks. In the present study we identified the neural substrates of grammatical gender assignment using an fMRI parametric study. Participants decided the grammatical gender of visually presented Italian words whose gender-to-ending regularity varied. The results showed activation in left and right fronto-temporal areas suggesting an interplay of both hemispheres in the processing of grammatical gender.
Clinical Autonomic Research | 2009
Pietro Guaraldi; Maria Serra; Giorgio Barletta; Giulia Pierangeli; Rossana Terlizzi; Giovanna Calandra-Buonaura; Danilo Cialoni; Pietro Cortelli
During maximal breath-holding six healthy elite breath-hold divers, after an initial “easy-going” phase in which cardiovascular changes resembled the so-called “diving response”, exhibited a sudden and severe rise in blood pressure during the “struggle” phase of the maneuver. These changes may represent the first tangible expression of a defense reaction, which overrides the classic diving reflex, aiming to reduce the hypoxic damage and to break the apnea before the loss of consciousness.
Clinical Neurophysiology | 2008
Giovanna Calandra-Buonaura; Pietro Cortelli; Giulia Pierangeli; M.A. Ribani; Giorgio Barletta; Michela Mazzetti; Maurizio Codispoti
OBJECTIVEnReflex Syncope (RS) is a self-limited loss of consciousness due to systemic arterial hypotension resulting from widespread vasodilatation and/or bradycardia. Higher neural centres have been implicated in the pathophysiology of RS, particularly in blood/injury phobic patients. We investigated interictal central autonomic functions in non-phobic RS subjects compared to non-phobic controls evaluating their central and cardiovascular responses to emotional stimuli.nnnMETHODSnCardiovascular responses to Valsalva Manoeuvre (VM), Deep Breathing (DB) and during presentation of 108 slides selected from the International Affective Picture System were assessed in 20 non-phobic RS subjects and 20 controls. Slide onset visual event-related potentials (ERPs) were also computed.nnnRESULTSnNo significant difference in cardiovascular responses and ERP amplitude were found in non-phobic RS subjects and controls at rest, in response to VM and DB or during picture presentation.nnnCONCLUSIONSnNon-phobic patients with RS not only have a normal interictal autonomic control of the cardiovascular system but also a normal modulation and adaptation of central and cardiovascular response to emotional processing, in our experimental setting.nnnSIGNIFICANCEnNon-phobic patients with RS present normal interictal central and cardiovascular responses. Autonomic dysfunction observed in phobic RS patients could be related to mechanisms underlying the phobia itself rather than the mechanisms causing RS.