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Dive into the research topics where Giovanni Di Pino is active.

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Featured researches published by Giovanni Di Pino.


Science Translational Medicine | 2014

Restoring Natural Sensory Feedback in Real-Time Bidirectional Hand Prostheses

Stanisa Raspopovic; Marco Capogrosso; Francesco Maria Petrini; Marco Bonizzato; Jacopo Rigosa; Giovanni Di Pino; Jacopo Carpaneto; Marco Controzzi; Tim Boretius; Eduardo Fernandez; Giuseppe Granata; Calogero Maria Oddo; Luca Citi; Anna Lisa Ciancio; Christian Cipriani; Maria Chiara Carrozza; Winnie Jensen; Eugenio Guglielmelli; Thomas Stieglitz; Paolo Maria Rossini; Silvestro Micera

A multigrasp, bidirectional hand prosthesis delivers dynamic sensory feedback, allowing a user with a hand amputation to achieve fine grasping force control and realistic object sensing. An Artificial Hand’s Sense of Touch To feel the hard curvature of a baseball or the soft cylinder that is a soda can—these sensations we often take for granted. But amputees with a prosthetic arm know only that they are holding an object, the shape and stiffness discernible only by eye or from experience. Toward a more sophisticated prosthetic that can “feel” an object, Raspopovic and colleagues incorporated a feedback system connected to the amputee’s arm nerves, which delivers sensory information in real time. The authors connected electrodes in the arm nerves to sensors in two fingers of the prosthetic hand. To “feel” an object, the electrodes delivered electrical stimuli to the nerves that were proportional to the finger sensor readouts. To grasp an object and perform other motor commands, muscle signals were decoded. This bidirectional hand prosthetic was tested in a single amputee who was blindfolded and acoustically shielded to assure that sound and vision were not being used to manipulate objects. In more than 700 trials, the subject showed that he could modulate force and grasp and identify physical characteristics of different types of objects, such as cotton balls, an orange, and a piece of wood. Such sensory feedback with precise control over a hand prosthetic would allow amputees to more freely and naturally explore their environments. Hand loss is a highly disabling event that markedly affects the quality of life. To achieve a close to natural replacement for the lost hand, the user should be provided with the rich sensations that we naturally perceive when grasping or manipulating an object. Ideal bidirectional hand prostheses should involve both a reliable decoding of the user’s intentions and the delivery of nearly “natural” sensory feedback through remnant afferent pathways, simultaneously and in real time. However, current hand prostheses fail to achieve these requirements, particularly because they lack any sensory feedback. We show that by stimulating the median and ulnar nerve fascicles using transversal multichannel intrafascicular electrodes, according to the information provided by the artificial sensors from a hand prosthesis, physiologically appropriate (near-natural) sensory information can be provided to an amputee during the real-time decoding of different grasping tasks to control a dexterous hand prosthesis. This feedback enabled the participant to effectively modulate the grasping force of the prosthesis with no visual or auditory feedback. Three different force levels were distinguished and consistently used by the subject. The results also demonstrate that a high complexity of perception can be obtained, allowing the subject to identify the stiffness and shape of three different objects by exploiting different characteristics of the elicited sensations. This approach could improve the efficacy and “life-like” quality of hand prostheses, resulting in a keystone strategy for the near-natural replacement of missing hands.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2010

Double nerve intraneural interface implant on a human amputee for robotic hand control

Paolo Maria Rossini; Silvestro Micera; A. Benvenuto; Jacopo Carpaneto; Giuseppe Cavallo; Luca Citi; Christian Cipriani; Luca Denaro; Vincenzo Denaro; Giovanni Di Pino; Florinda Ferreri; Eugenio Guglielmelli; Klaus-Peter Hoffmann; Stanisa Raspopovic; Jacopo Rigosa; L. Rossini; Mario Tombini; Paolo Dario

OBJECTIVES The principle underlying this project is that, despite nervous reorganization following upper limb amputation, original pathways and CNS relays partially maintain their function and can be exploited for interfacing prostheses. Aim of this study is to evaluate a novel peripheral intraneural multielectrode for multi-movement prosthesis control and for sensory feed-back, while assessing cortical reorganization following the re-acquired stream of data. METHODS Four intrafascicular longitudinal flexible multielectrodes (tf-LIFE4) were implanted in the median and ulnar nerves of an amputee; they reliably recorded output signals for 4 weeks. Artificial intelligence classifiers were used off-line to analyse LIFE signals recorded during three distinct hand movements under voluntary order. RESULTS Real-time control of motor output was achieved for the three actions. When applied off-line artificial intelligence reached >85% real-time correct classification of trials. Moreover, different types of current stimulation were determined to allow reproducible and localized hand/fingers sensations. Cortical organization was observed via TMS in parallel with partial resolution of symptoms due to the phantom-limb syndrome (PLS). CONCLUSIONS tf-LIFE4s recorded output signals in human nerves for 4 weeks, though the efficacy of sensory stimulation decayed after 10 days. Recording from a number of fibres permitted a high percentage of distinct actions to be classified correctly. Reversal of plastic changes and alleviation of PLS represent corollary findings of potential therapeutic benefit. SIGNIFICANCE This study represents a breakthrough in robotic hand use in amputees.


Nature Reviews Neurology | 2014

Modulation of brain plasticity in stroke: a novel model for neurorehabilitation

Giovanni Di Pino; Giovanni Pellegrino; Giovanni Assenza; Fioravante Capone; Florinda Ferreri; Domenico Formica; Federico Ranieri; Mario Tombini; Ulf Ziemann; John C. Rothwell; Vincenzo Di Lazzaro

Noninvasive brain stimulation (NIBS) techniques can be used to monitor and modulate the excitability of intracortical neuronal circuits. Long periods of cortical stimulation can produce lasting effects on brain function, paving the way for therapeutic applications of NIBS in chronic neurological disease. The potential of NIBS in stroke rehabilitation has been of particular interest, because stroke is the main cause of permanent disability in industrial nations, and treatment outcomes often fail to meet the expectations of patients. Despite promising reports from many clinical trials on NIBS for stroke recovery, the number of studies reporting a null effect remains a concern. One possible explanation is that the interhemispheric competition model—which posits that suppressing the excitability of the hemisphere not affected by stroke will enhance recovery by reducing interhemispheric inhibition of the stroke hemisphere, and forms the rationale for many studies—is oversimplified or even incorrect. Here, we critically review the proposed mechanisms of synaptic and functional reorganization after stroke, and suggest a bimodal balance–recovery model that links interhemispheric balancing and functional recovery to the structural reserve spared by the lesion. The proposed model could enable NIBS to be tailored to the needs of individual patients.


Sensors | 2013

Optical Fiber-Based MR-Compatible Sensors for Medical Applications: An Overview

Fabrizio Taffoni; Domenico Formica; Paola Saccomandi; Giovanni Di Pino; Emiliano Schena

During last decades, Magnetic Resonance (MR)—compatible sensors based on different techniques have been developed due to growing demand for application in medicine. There are several technological solutions to design MR-compatible sensors, among them, the one based on optical fibers presents several attractive features. The high elasticity and small size allow designing miniaturized fiber optic sensors (FOS) with metrological characteristics (e.g., accuracy, sensitivity, zero drift, and frequency response) adequate for most common medical applications; the immunity from electromagnetic interference and the absence of electrical connection to the patient make FOS suitable to be used in high electromagnetic field and intrinsically safer than conventional technologies. These two features further heightened the potential role of FOS in medicine making them especially attractive for application in MRI. This paper provides an overview of MR-compatible FOS, focusing on the sensors employed for measuring physical parameters in medicine (i.e., temperature, force, torque, strain, and position). The working principles of the most promising FOS are reviewed in terms of their relevant advantages and disadvantages, together with their applications in medicine.


eLife | 2016

Intraneural stimulation elicits discrimination of textural features by artificial fingertip in intact and amputee humans

Calogero Maria Oddo; Stanisa Raspopovic; Fiorenzo Artoni; Alberto Mazzoni; Giacomo Spigler; Francesco Maria Petrini; Federica Giambattistelli; Fabrizio Vecchio; Francesca Miraglia; Loredana Zollo; Giovanni Di Pino; Domenico Camboni; Maria Chiara Carrozza; Eugenio Guglielmelli; Paolo Maria Rossini; Ugo Faraguna; Silvestro Micera

Restoration of touch after hand amputation is a desirable feature of ideal prostheses. Here, we show that texture discrimination can be artificially provided in human subjects by implementing a neuromorphic real-time mechano-neuro-transduction (MNT), which emulates to some extent the firing dynamics of SA1 cutaneous afferents. The MNT process was used to modulate the temporal pattern of electrical spikes delivered to the human median nerve via percutaneous microstimulation in four intact subjects and via implanted intrafascicular stimulation in one transradial amputee. Both approaches allowed the subjects to reliably discriminate spatial coarseness of surfaces as confirmed also by a hybrid neural model of the median nerve. Moreover, MNT-evoked EEG activity showed physiologically plausible responses that were superimposable in time and topography to the ones elicited by a natural mechanical tactile stimulation. These findings can open up novel opportunities for sensory restoration in the next generation of neuro-prosthetic hands. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.09148.001


Brain Stimulation | 2014

Immediate and Late Modulation of Interhemipheric Imbalance With Bilateral Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation in Acute Stroke

Vincenzo Di Lazzaro; Michele Dileone; Fioravante Capone; Giovanni Pellegrino; Federico Ranieri; Gabriella Musumeci; Lucia Florio; Giovanni Di Pino; Felipe Fregni

BACKGROUND Significant changes in neurophysiological and clinical outcomes in chronic stroke had been reported after tDCS; but there is a paucity of data in acute stroke. OBJECTIVE We aimed to evaluate whether a tDCS-induced modulation of primary motor cortex excitability in patients with acute stroke enhances motor recovery associated with rehabilitation and induces differential neuroplasticity. METHODS We conducted two experiments in acute stroke patients. In experiment 1 (14 patients), we tested the immediate effects of bilateral tDCS alone as compared to sham tDCS on recovery. Experiment 2 (20 patients) was designed to assess effects of bilateral tDCS delivered together with constraint-induced movement therapy (CIMT). In this experiment, we included a longer follow-up (3 months) and measured, in addition to the same clinical outcomes of experiment 1, changes of motor cortex excitability and the amount of promoted LTP-like activity. RESULTS Despite the expected improvement at 1 week, none of the clinical measures showed any different modulation in dependence of CIMT and tDCS. On the neurophysiological assessments, on the other hand, the Real_tDCS group, compared to Sham_tDCS group, showed a reduction of inter-hemispheric imbalance when considering the differences of motor evoked potential between both 3-month and 1 week follow up (P = 0.007) and three month and baseline (P = 0.015). CONCLUSIONS Despite the lack of additional clinical changes, real bilateral tDCS, together with CIMT, significantly reduces inter-hemispheric imbalance between affected and unaffected hemispheres. These findings may shed light on plasticity changes in acute stroke and its potential impact in chronic phases.


Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience | 2014

Augmentation-related brain plasticity

Giovanni Di Pino; Angelo Maravita; Loredana Zollo; E. Guglielmelli; Vincenzo Di Lazzaro

Today, the anthropomorphism of the tools and the development of neural interfaces require reconsidering the concept of human-tools interaction in the framework of human augmentation. This review analyses the plastic process that the brain undergoes when it comes into contact with augmenting artificial sensors and effectors and, on the other hand, the changes that the use of external augmenting devices produces in the brain. Hitherto, few studies investigated the neural correlates of augmentation, but clues on it can be borrowed from logically-related paradigms: sensorimotor training, cognitive enhancement, cross-modal plasticity, sensorimotor functional substitution, use and embodiment of tools. Augmentation modifies function and structure of a number of areas, i.e., primary sensory cortices shape their receptive fields to become sensitive to novel inputs. Motor areas adapt the neuroprosthesis representation firing-rate to refine kinematics. As for normal motor outputs, the learning process recruits motor and premotor cortices and the acquisition of proficiency decreases attentional recruitment, focuses the activity on sensorimotor areas and increases the basal ganglia drive on the cortex. Augmentation deeply relies on the frontoparietal network. In particular, premotor cortex is involved in learning the control of an external effector and owns the tool motor representation, while the intraparietal sulcus extracts its visual features. In these areas, multisensory integration neurons enlarge their receptive fields to embody supernumerary limbs. For operating an anthropomorphic neuroprosthesis, the mirror system is required to understand the meaning of the action, the cerebellum for the formation of its internal model and the insula for its interoception. In conclusion, anthropomorphic sensorized devices can provide the critical sensory afferences to evolve the exploitation of tools through their embodiment, reshaping the body representation and the sense of the self.


Frontiers in Neuroscience | 2016

Control of Prosthetic Hands via the Peripheral Nervous System.

Anna Lisa Ciancio; Francesca Cordella; Roberto Barone; Rocco Antonio Romeo; Alberto Dellacasa Bellingegni; Rinaldo Sacchetti; Angelo Davalli; Giovanni Di Pino; Federico Ranieri; Vincenzo Di Lazzaro; Eugenio Guglielmelli; Loredana Zollo

This paper intends to provide a critical review of the literature on the technological issues on control and sensorization of hand prostheses interfacing with the Peripheral Nervous System (i.e., PNS), and their experimental validation on amputees. The study opens with an in-depth analysis of control solutions and sensorization features of research and commercially available prosthetic hands. Pros and cons of adopted technologies, signal processing techniques and motion control solutions are investigated. Special emphasis is then dedicated to the recent studies on the restoration of tactile perception in amputees through neural interfaces. The paper finally proposes a number of suggestions for designing the prosthetic system able to re-establish a bidirectional communication with the PNS and foster the prosthesis natural control.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2014

Invasive neural interfaces: the perspective of the surgeon

Giovanni Di Pino; Luca Denaro; Gianluca Vadalà; Andrea Marinozzi; Mario Tombini; Florinda Ferreri; Rocco Papalia; Dino Accoto; Eugenio Guglielmelli; Vincenzo Di Lazzaro; Vincenzo Denaro

BACKGROUND By implanting electrodes inside peripheral nerves, amputees intentions are picked up and exploited to control novel dexterous sensorized hand prostheses. Under the pretext of presenting surgical technique and clinical outcomes of the implant of invasive peripheral neural interfaces in a human amputee, this article critically comments, from the point of view of the surgeon, strengths and weaknesses of the procedure. MATERIALS AND METHODS Four multielectrodes were implanted in the medial and ulnar nerves of a young volunteer, which, following a car-crash, had a left transradial amputation. Both nerves were approached with a single incision in the medial aspect of the upper arm. Four weeks later, the electrodes were removed. RESULTS Even if the trauma and the postamputation plastic processes altered the anatomy, electrodes were proficiently implanted with an overall success of 66%. Looking at the procedure from the surgeons viewpoint unveils few still open issues. Electrodes weaknesses were related to the absence of stabilizing structures, the cable transit through the skin, the implant angle, and the unproven magnetic resonance imaging compatibility. Future investigations are needed to definitely address the better anesthesia, number and sites of incisions, the nerves to implant, and the convenience of performing epineural microdissection. CONCLUSIONS Invasive neural interfaces developmental process almost completely relies on the efforts of bioengineers and neurophysiologists; however, the surgeon is responsible for intra and perioperative factors. Therefore, he deserves to play a major role also at the stage of specifying the requirements, to satisfy the requisites of a safe, stable, and long-lasting implant.


Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair | 2016

Val66Met BDNF Polymorphism Implies a Different Way to Recover From Stroke Rather Than a Worse Overall Recoverability

Giovanni Di Pino; Giovanni Pellegrino; Fioravante Capone; Giovanni Assenza; Lucia Florio; Emma Falato; Fiorenza Lotti; Vincenzo Di Lazzaro

In search for individualized predictors of stroke recovery, the Val66Met polymorphism of the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is attracting great interest, because it has a negative impact on neurotrophin function. Since stroke recovery relies on brain plastic processes, on which BDNF is permissive, the dominant thought is in favor of a worse recovery in Met carriers. Conversely, we suggest that Met carriers do not differ in terms of absolute ability to recover from stroke, but they do differ on the way they recover. In particular, Met carriers rely more on subcortical plasticity, while ValVal patients more on intracortical plastic processes. Indeed, the direct evidence of impaired Met carrier recovery is inconsistent, as a high worldwide diffusion of the polymorphism suggests. The plasticity taking place in cortex, which is the one targeted by noninvasive brain stimulation strategies aimed at enhancing recovery, is less pronounced in Met carrier stroke patients, who have instead spared global recovery potential. Enhanced subcortical plasticity sustains better stroke recovery of Met carrier mice: this may also happen in humans, explaining the weaker interhemispheric cortical excitability imbalance recently described in Met carriers. Thus, BDNF haplotype determines mechanisms and structures involved in stroke recovery. The less pronounced cortical plasticity of Met carrier implies that plastic changes induced by interventional neurophysiological protocols would be better predictors of ValVal chronic outcome and those protocols would be more effective to boost their recovery. Other strategies, more focused on subcortical mechanisms, should be used in Met carriers.

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Dive into the Giovanni Di Pino's collaboration.

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Vincenzo Di Lazzaro

Università Campus Bio-Medico

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Eugenio Guglielmelli

Università Campus Bio-Medico

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Fioravante Capone

Università Campus Bio-Medico

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Mario Tombini

Università Campus Bio-Medico

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Giovanni Pellegrino

Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital

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Giovanni Assenza

Sapienza University of Rome

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Domenico Formica

Università Campus Bio-Medico

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Federico Ranieri

Università Campus Bio-Medico

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Lucia Florio

Università Campus Bio-Medico

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