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Dive into the research topics where Giuliano Tomelleri is active.

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Featured researches published by Giuliano Tomelleri.


The Lancet | 1996

Critical illness myopathy and neuropathy

Nicola Latronico; D. Recupero; A. Candiani; B. Guarneri; G. De Maria; L. Antonini; Flavio Fenzi; Giuliano Tomelleri; Paola Tonin; N. Rizzuto

BACKGROUND Critically ill patients may develop muscle weakness or paralysis during the course of sepsis and multiple-organ failure. We studied peripheral nerve and muscle disorders (NMD) in comatose patients. METHOD Comatose patients who developed paralysis associated with absent deep-tendon reflexes had electroneuromyography (ENMG) and muscle-nerve biopsy specimens taken. Onset and duration of sepsis, multiple-organ dysfunction and failure, biochemical alterations, and drugs potentially interfering with nerve-muscle function were recorded. FINDINGS 24 patients became quadriparetic or quadriplegic; muscle changes were found in 23. Axonal neuropathy was found in eight of 22 patients examined. All patients had prolonged sepsis and multiple-organ dysfunction, but only 14 had multiple-organ failure. Drugs such as steroids, neuromuscular-blocking agents, and aminoglycosides were not responsible for paresis, and the part played by hyperglycaemia and hypoalbuminaemia is uncertain. Attending physicians predicted a fatal outcome in all cases, although six of seven survivors fully recovered within 115-210 days from the onset of paralysis. INTERPRETATION Comatose patients may become completely paralysed because of NMD. The diagnosis is important to avoid unnecessary investigations and unreasonably pessimistic prognosis. ENMG is essential for the diagnosis and for planning further clinical management. Biopsy needs to be done only when it is necessary to properly classify NMD.


Annals of Neurology | 2003

Phenotype modulators in myophosphorylase deficiency

Andrea Martinuzzi; Elena Sartori; Marina Fanin; Annachiara Nascimbeni; Lucia Valente; Corrado Angelini; Gabriele Siciliano; Tiziana Mongini; Paola Tonin; Giuliano Tomelleri; Antonio Toscano; Luciano Merlini; Laurence A. Bindoff; Stefano Bertelli

Myophosphorylase deficiency is characterized by exercise intolerance, muscle cramps, and recurrent myoglobinuria. Some patients are severely affected, whereas others are minimally affected or asymptomatic. The molecular basis of the disease has been elucidated but does not provide an explanation for the clinical variability. In a large cohort of patients with myophosphorylase deficiency, we tested the hypothesis that polymorphic variants in either myoadenylate deaminase (MADA) or angiotensin‐converting enzyme (ACE) could act as modulators of phenotype expression. Forty‐seven patients were evaluated. Clinical severity was assessed according to a severity scale of four grades. MADA activity was studied by histochemical and biochemical analysis of muscle, and the Q12X mutation in the adenine monophosphate deaminase 1 gene (AMPD1) and the insertion/deletion polymorphism in the ACE gene were assessed genetically. A complete MADA defect together with the Q12X mutation was detected in one severely affected patient. Eleven patients were heterozygous for the Q12X mutation. There was no association between clinical grading and MADA status. In contrast, we found a highly significant (p < 0.01) association between ACE genotype and clinical severity, with strong correlation between severe phenotype and number of D alleles. We show that ACE insertion/deletion polymorphism may play a significant role as phenotype modulator in McArdles disease. Ann Neurol 2003


Journal of Neurology | 2011

The role of mitochondria in neurodegenerative diseases

Massimiliano Filosto; Mauro Scarpelli; Maria Cotelli; Valentina Vielmi; Alice Todeschini; Valeria Gregorelli; Paola Tonin; Giuliano Tomelleri; Alessandro Padovani

Mitochondria are implicated in several metabolic pathways including cell respiratory processes, apoptosis, and free radical production. Mitochondrial abnormalities have been documented in neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and Huntington’s diseases, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Several studies have demonstrated that mitochondrial impairment plays an important role in the pathogenesis of this group of disorders. In this review, we discuss the role of mitochondria in the main neurodegenerative diseases and review the updated knowledge in this field.


Clinical Genetics | 2009

Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy: epidemiological and molecular study in a north-east Italian population sample

Maria Luisa Mostacciuolo; Ebe Pastorello; Giovanni Vazza; Marta Miorin; Corrado Angelini; Giuliano Tomelleri; Giuliana Galluzzi; Carlo P. Trevisan

Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is an autosomal dominant disease associated with a partial deletion on chromosome 4q35. Few relevant investigations have been reported on its epidemiology and were essentially based on clinical diagnosis, having been performed before recognition of the molecular mutation. We report an epidemiological survey on FSHD patients, in which the diagnosis was obtained by combined clinical and molecular evaluation. The survey concerned the north‐east Italian province of Padova, an area of 871,190 inhabitants (1 January 2004). We identified 40 patients affected by FSHD based on clinical diagnosis. In 33 of them, the EcoRI fragment size in the 4q35 region ranged from 14 to 35 kb. Four other patients belonging to the same family harbored a 38‐kb fragment. In these four cases, the relationship between the borderline deletion with the mild FSHD phenotype was corroborated by additional haplotype reconstruction and segregation analysis. Interestingly, the same mild facial‐sparing clinical pattern was apparent only in one other patient with an EcoRI fragment of 32 kb, suggesting that this unusual FSHD phenotype may be due to very small 4q35 deletions. On the whole, estimating a prevalence rate of 44 × 10−6, our survey confirmed FSHD as one of the most frequent neuromuscular disorders in Western populations.


European Neurology | 2006

Facioscapulohumeral Muscular Dystrophy and Occurrence of Heart Arrhythmia

Carlo P. Trevisan; Ebe Pastorello; Mario Armani; Corrado Angelini; Giovanni Nante; Giuliano Tomelleri; Paola Tonin; Tiziana Mongini; L. Palmucci; Giuliana Galluzzi; Rossella Tupler; Agata Barchitta

Background: Subjects with facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) do not generally suffer from significant cardiac symptoms. Although with heterogeneous results, studies reported to date indicate that heart alterations unrelated to cardiomyopathy are possible in FSHD. Patients and Methods: We describe the findings of a multicenter investigation aimed at detecting cardiac abnormalities in 83 FSHD patients, 44 males and 39 females with a mean age of 47 years. All patients underwent clinical heart examination, 12-lead electrocardiography and 24-hour Holter monitoring; echocardiography was also performed on most patients. Results: Among the 83 patients, 62 with no cardiovascular risk factors were identified. Ten of them manifested clinical or subclinical cardiac involvement: 5 reported symptoms represented mostly by frequent palpitations secondary to supraventricular arrhythmia and another 5 exhibited electrocardiographic signs of short runs of supraventricular paroxysmal tachycardia. In the absence of cardiovascular risk factors, we found symptoms or signs of heart involvement of mainly arrhythmic origin in 10 of our 83 FSHD patients (12%). Conclusions: Considering our data and those available in the literature as a whole, arrhythmic alterations seem to be detected more frequently than expected in FSHD patients.


Brain Pathology | 2006

Increased Expression of the Normal Cellular Isoform of Prion Protein in Inclusion-Body Myositis, Inflammatory Myopathies and Denervation Atrophy

Gianluigi Zanusso; Gaetano Vattemi; Sergio Ferrari; Massimo Tabaton; Elisa Pecini; Tiziana Cavallaro; Giuliano Tomelleri; Massimiliano Filosto; Paola Tonin; Ettore Nardelli; Nicola Rizzuto; Salvatore Monaco

The cellular isoform of the prion protein (PrPc) is a glycosylphosphatidylinositol‐anchored glycoprotein, normally expressed in neural and non‐neural tissues, including skeletal muscle. In transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, or prion diseases, PrPc, which is soluble in nondenaturing detergent and sensitive to proteinase K (PK)‐treatment, represents the molecular substrate for the production of a detergent‐insoluble and PK‐resistant isoform, termed PrPSc.


Brain | 2013

Large scale genotype-phenotype analyses indicate that novel prognostic tools are required for families with facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy.

Giulia Ricci; Isabella Scionti; Francesco Sera; Monica Govi; Roberto D'Amico; Ilaria Frambolli; Fabiano Mele; Massimiliano Filosto; Liliana Vercelli; Lucia Ruggiero; Angela Berardinelli; Corrado Angelini; Giovanni Antonini; Elisabetta Bucci; Michelangelo Cao; Jessica Daolio; A. Di Muzio; R. Di Leo; Giuliana Galluzzi; Elisabetta Iannaccone; Lorenzo Maggi; Maruotti; Maurizio Moggio; Tiziana Mongini; Lucia Morandi; Ana Nikolic; Ebe Pastorello; Enzo Ricci; Carmelo Rodolico; Lucio Santoro

Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy has been genetically linked to reduced numbers (≤8) of D4Z4 repeats at 4q35 combined with 4A(159/161/168) DUX4 polyadenylation signal haplotype. However, we have recently reported that 1.3% of healthy individuals carry this molecular signature and 19% of subjects affected by facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy do not carry alleles with eight or fewer D4Z4 repeats. Therefore, prognosis for subjects carrying or at risk of carrying D4Z4 reduced alleles has become more complicated. To test for additional prognostic factors, we measured the degree of motor impairment in a large group of patients affected by facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy and their relatives who are carrying D4Z4 reduced alleles. The clinical expression of motor impairment was assessed in 530 subjects, 163 probands and 367 relatives, from 176 unrelated families according to a standardized clinical score. The associations between clinical severity and size of D4Z4 allele, degree of kinship, gender, age and 4q haplotype were evaluated. Overall, 32.2% of relatives did not display any muscle functional impairment. This phenotype was influenced by the degree of relation with proband, because 47.1% of second- through fifth-degree relatives were unaffected, whereas only 27.5% of first-degree family members did not show motor impairment. The estimated risk of developing motor impairment by age 50 for relatives carrying a D4Z4 reduced allele with 1–3 repeats or 4–8 repeats was 88.7% and 55%, respectively. Male relatives had a mean score significantly higher than females (5.4 versus 4.0, P = 0.003). No 4q haplotype was exclusively associated with the presence of disease. In 13% of families in which D4Z4 alleles with 4–8 repeats segregate, the diagnosis of facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy was reported only in one generation. In conclusion, this large-scale analysis provides further information that should be taken into account when counselling families in which a reduced allele with 4–8 D4Z4 repeats segregates. In addition, the reduced expression of disease observed in distant relatives suggests that a family’s genetic background plays a role in the occurrence of facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy. These results indicate that the identification of new susceptibility factors for this disease will require an accurate classification of families.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2012

Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy: new insights from compound heterozygotes and implication for prenatal genetic counselling

Isabella Scionti; Greta Fabbri; Chiara Fiorillo; Giulia Ricci; Francesca Greco; Roberto D'Amico; Alberto Termanini; Liliana Vercelli; Giuliano Tomelleri; Michelangelo Cao; Lucio Santoro; Antonio Percesepe; Rossella Tupler

Background Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is considered an autosomal dominant disease with a prevalence of 1 in 20 000. Almost all patients with FSHD carry deletions of integral copies of tandem 3.3 kb repeats (D4Z4) located on chromosome 4q35. However, FSHD families have been reported in which individuals carrying a D4Z4-reduced allele remain asymptomatic. Recently, it has been proposed that the D4Z4-reduced allele is pathogenic only in association with the permissive haplotype, 4APAS. Methods and results Through the Italian National Registry for FSHD (INRF), genotype–phenotype correlations were extensively studied in 11 non-consanguineous families in which two D4Z4-reduced alleles segregate. Overall, 68 subjects carrying D4Z4-reduced alleles were examined, including 15 compound heterozygotes. It was found that in four families the only FSHD-affected subject was the compound heterozygote for the D4Z4-reduced allele, and 52.6% of subjects carrying a single D4Z4-reduced 4A161PAS haplotype were non-penetrant carriers; moreover, the population frequency of the 4A161PAS haplotype associated with a D4Z4-reduced allele was found to be as high as 1.2%. Conclusions This study reveals a high frequency of compound heterozygotes in the Italian population and the presence of D4Z4-reduced alleles with the 4A161PAS pathogenic haplotype in the majority of non-penetrant subjects in FSHD families with compound heterozygosity. These data suggest that carriers of FSHD-sized alleles with 4A161PAS haplotype are more common in the general population than expected on the basis of FSHD prevalence. These findings challenge the notion that FSHD is a fully penetrant autosomal dominant disorder uniquely associated with the 4A161PAS haplotype, with relevant repercussions for genetic counselling and prenatal diagnosis.


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2001

A new mutation in the mitochondrial tRNAAla gene in a patient with ophthalmoplegia and dysphagia

Michele Spagnolo; Giuliano Tomelleri; Gaetano Vattemi; Massimiliano Filosto; N. Rizzuto; Paola Tonin

We describe a new mutation in the tRNA(Ala) gene, a T-->C transition at nucleotide position 5628, in a 62-year-old woman with late onset chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia, dysphagia and mild proximal myopathy. The mutation is heteroplasmic and disrupts a highly conserved A-U base pair within the anticodon stem of the tRNA(Ala). Cytochrome c oxidase-negative fibers harbor a significantly higher level of mutated mtDNA than cytochrome c oxidase-positive fibers. This is the first mutation in the tRNA(Ala) gene which satisfies accepted criteria for pathogenicity.


Neurology | 2007

The role of muscle biopsy in investigating isolated muscle pain

Massimiliano Filosto; Paola Tonin; Gaetano Vattemi; Laura Bertolasi; Alessandro Simonati; N. Rizzuto; Giuliano Tomelleri

Objective: To evaluate the muscle biopsy findings from 240 patients who had isolated muscle pain. Methods: Histopathology, immunohistochemistry for dystrophin, dystrophin-related proteins, major histocompatibility complex type I, and biochemical analysis of glycolytic and mitochondrial respiratory chain enzymes were performed on muscle biopsies. An attempt was made to correlate pathologic data and clinical findings (sex, age, quality and distribution of symptoms, serum CK levels, and EMG recording). Results: We have described five groups of patients based on muscle biopsy findings: 51.6% had heterogeneous myopathic abnormalities; only 19% of them had a specific myopathic picture, i.e., central nuclei myopathy, central core disease, myopathy with tubular aggregates or with trabecular fibers or abnormalities of fiber typing; 20% had signs of respiratory chain dysfunction but only one patient had a probable mitochondrial disease; 7% had a neurogenic pattern; 2.4% had a metabolic myopathy (phosphorylase or phosphofructokinase deficiency); and 19% had normal muscle biopsy. No clear-cut correlation between muscle biopsy and clinical data was observed except for those patients with a metabolic myopathy. Conclusions: The probability that a patient complaining only of muscle pain and with a normal neurologic examination has a definite muscle pathology is 2%. Only patients with sole exercise-related muscle pain and sCK seven times higher than the normal value are strongly suspected of having a metabolic myopathy. A rigorous selection of patients is needed before performing a muscle biopsy.

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Rossella Tupler

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Maurizio Moggio

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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