Giuseppe Ciacci
University of Siena
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Featured researches published by Giuseppe Ciacci.
Neurology | 2003
Stefano Passero; Giuseppe Ciacci; Monica Ulivelli
Objective: To determine whether diabetes and admission hyperglycemia in nondiabetic patients influence outcome and the occurrence of cerebral and medical complications after intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). Methods: The study sample included 764 patients with ICH. The effects of diabetes and admission hyperglycemia were examined in relation to 30-day and 3-month mortality using Cox regression models controlling for potential confounders. The analysis was conducted for the entire sample of patients and repeated in comatose and noncomatose patients. Results: Among comatose patients, neither diabetes nor admission hyperglycemia contributed significant predictive information, as nearly all patients died. In noncomatose patients, diabetes was an independent predictor of 30-day (odds ratio [OR] 1.31; 95% CI 1.08 to 1.58) and 3-month (OR 1.30; 95% CI 1.08 to 1.56) mortality and was associated with a greater incidence of infectious (OR 1.24; 95% CI 1.03 to 1.49) and cerebral (OR 1.42; 95% CI 1.10 to 1.83) complications. Among nondiabetic patients with Glasgow Coma Scale score of >8, hyperglycemia was an independent predictor of 30-day (OR 1.29; 95% CI 1.05 to 1.58) and 3-month (OR 1.27; 95% CI 1.05 to 1.53) mortality and was associated with a greater incidence of cerebral complications (OR 1.47; 95% CI 1.12 to 2.94). Conclusions: Both diabetes and admission hyperglycemia in nondiabetic patients are predictors of poor outcome after supratentorial ICH. This may be related to the greater incidence of cerebral and infectious complications in diabetic patients and of cerebral complications in hyperglycemic nondiabetic patients.
Stroke | 2000
Stefano Passero; Fabio Reale; Giuseppe Ciacci; Ettore Zei
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The purpose of this study was to further analyze the temporal patterns of onset of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) and to determine whether or not subgroups with specific clinical characteristics exhibit different patterns of onset. METHODS The daily, weekly, and yearly variations in occurrence of ICH together with the relationship between ICH occurrence and changes in air temperature were evaluated in 1018 patients. Patients were grouped according to the presumed etiology of ICH: hypertensive ICH, secondary ICH, and ICH of undetermined origin. The contribution of demographic and clinical factors to the temporal distributions of ICH was also evaluated. RESULTS Marked differences in seasonal and diurnal patterns of ICH onset were observed in the different groups. The incidence of hypertensive ICH reflected seasonal and circadian changes in blood pressure, whereas the latter did not seem related to the onset of nonhypertensive ICH. The seasonal pattern was more evident in elderly patients with hypertensive ICH than in younger subjects. No significant weekly variations were observed; however, risk was greater on Monday in the working population. CONCLUSIONS Our results suggest that the higher incidence of ICH in the colder months is due to the effect of low temperatures on blood pressure and that the clustering of ICH events in the morning is due to the increase in sympathetic tone, and consequent increase in blood pressure, on awakening.
European Neurology | 2000
Silvia Palmeri; Marcello Villanova; Alessandro Malandrini; Otto P. van Diggelen; Jean G.M. Huijmans; Chantal Ceuterick; Alessandra Rufa; Danilo DeFalco; Giuseppe Ciacci; Jean Jacques Martin; G. C. Guazzi
We report biochemical, morphological and neuroradiological findings in a 40-year-old woman affected with type I sialidosis. The clinical symptoms, consisting of a cerebellar syndrome, were first noted at the age of 17 years. The macular cherry-red spot was first observed after 23 years of disease. A CT scan performed at 21 years of age showed enlargement of the fourth ventricle. Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging of the brain performed at the age of 40 showed severe atrophy of the cerebellum and pontine region; atrophy of cerebral hemispheres and of the corpus callosum was also observed. We emphasize the prolonged course of illness in this patient, observed over a long period of time. Of particular interest is the neuroradiological study showing our findings both at the beginning of the disease and after 20 years.
Acta Neuropathologica | 1993
Alessandro Malandrini; Gian Maria Fabrizi; Silvia Palmeri; Giuseppe Ciacci; Claudio Salvadori; Gianna Berti; Bucalossi A; Antonio Federico; G. C. Gnazzi
Detailed clinical and neuropathological findings in two unrelated patients with a chorea-acanthocytosis-like phenotype (CA) are reported. One case met all the diagnostic criteria of CA and had a deceased brother with the same disease. The second case had a virtually identical phenotype to the former but without acanthocytes. These findings suggest that both patients are affected by the same disease and that acanthocytes are not essential to the diagnosis. Neuropathological autopsy studies on the brain of the second case showed selective atrophy of the caudate nucleus that seemed to correspond to the movement disorder and behavioural abnormalities prominent in this patient. In both subjects, morphometric and ultrastructural examination of the peripheral nerve showed loss of myelinated fibres, more accentuated distally, and cytoskeletal changes in the axoplasm. These findings support the hypothesis that peripheral neuropathy in CA is caused by distal axonopathy.
Acta Neurologica Scandinavica | 1986
Alessandro Rossi; Giuseppe Ciacci; Antonio Federico; Mauro Mondelli; Nicola Rizzuto
We report the findings of an electrophysiological study in 9 patients affected by olivopontocerebellar atrophy, 4 with a dominant form and 5 with a sporadic form. Superficial peroneal nerve biopsy was obtained from 2 patients. The electrophysiological alterations were signs of collateral reinnervation and loss of motor units, decrease in sensory potential amplitude and increase in distal motor latency. Only a slight reduction in motor and sensory conduction velocity was observed in some cases. Nerve biopsy showed slight reduction of the number of myelinated fibres. In the first case, fibre diameter distribution was unimodal, due to reduction of myelinated fibres of large diameter, in the second case there was no significant alteration of the fibre distribution. In both cases short internodes were present with no signs of segmental demyelination, remyelination or axonal degenaration. The alterations observed in the peripheral nervous system are probably secondary to a lesion of the posterior root ganglion and the anterior horn cell in the spinal cord.
Neurology | 1997
Alessandro Malandrini; P. Carrera; Giuseppe Ciacci; S. Gonnelli; Marcello Villanova; Silvia Palmeri; L. Vismara; V. Brancolini; E. Signorini; Maurizio Ferrari; Gianni Guazzi
Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL) is a recently described inherited disorder. The pathologic gene maps on chromosome 19. The clinical spectrum of the disease consists of recurrent strokes, migraine, transient ischemic attacks, mood changes, and dementia. We report a genetically assessed CADASIL family with atypical clinical presentations of epileptic seizures. In two asymptomatic family members there were early brain abnormalities on MRI. Our report expands the clinical spectrum of CADASIL and suggests that it is possibly an undiagnosed disorder.
Cerebrovascular Diseases | 2001
Stefano Passero; Giuseppe Ciacci; Fabio Reale
The distributions of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) according to place of onset, degree of physical activity at onset and potential triggering factors were analyzed in 848 patients with ICH. Patients were grouped according to the presumed cause of ICH: hypertensive ICH, secondary ICH and ICH of undetermined origin. The influence of demographic and temporal factors on the relative frequency of events was also assessed. In 30% of the cases, ICH occurred during inactivity or sedentary activity, in 50% during light exertion and in 20% during moderate/vigorous exertion. During inactivity or sedentary activity, hypertensive ICH was significantly less frequent than secondary ICH (OR 0.32; 95% CI 0.21–0.47) and undetermined ICH (OR 0.36; 95% CI 0.23–0.55), whereas during moderate or vigorous exertion hypertensive ICH was more frequent than secondary (OR 1.88; 95% CI 1.16–3.05) and undetermined ICH (OR 2.29; 95% CI 1.31–4.00) Potential triggering factors were observed in 27% of patients and were significantly more frequent in patients with hypertensive ICH than in patients with secondary ICH (OR 2.90; 95% CI 1.85–4.54) or undetermined ICH (OR 2.44; 95% CI 1.54–3.87). Our findings suggest that many potential external triggers that act mainly by raising blood pressure may interact, and their concurrence may favor cerebral hemorrhage, particularly in hypertensive patients. In many cases, these circumstances of increased risk may be mitigated by preventive measures.
Journal of Human Genetics | 2007
Tiziana Squillaro; Franca Cambi; Giuseppe Ciacci; Simone Rossi; Monica Ulivelli; Alessandro Malandrini; Maria Antonietta Mencarelli; Francesca Mari; Alessandra Renieri; Francesca Ariani
AbstractMutations in the gene Leucine-Rich Repeat Kinase 2 (LRRK2) have been identified in both dominant and sporadic cases affected by Parkinsons disease (PD). The LRRK2 G2019S mutation (c.6055G>A) is the most frequent substitution in Caucasians, accounting for approximately 5-6% of familial and 0.5-2.0% of apparently sporadic PD cases. We investigated the frequency of the LRRK2 G2019S mutation in 98 unrelated Italian PD patients, including 12 probands belonging to families compatible with autosomal dominant inheritance (12%) and 86 sporadic cases (88%). We detected the G2019S mutation in one sporadic female patient (1.2%). These results confirm that the G2019S mutation is a relevant cause of sporadic PD cases in the Italian population and stress the importance of performing this genetic test, which has important implications for genetic counselling.
Biological Psychiatry | 1992
Antonio Federico; Silvia Palmeri; Alessandro Malandrini; Luciana Mangano; Giuseppe Ciacci; Chiara Scarpini; Giuseppe Tiacci
Chronic treatment of humans with several drugs is associated with lesions resembling lipidosis in different tissues. Recently, a Creutzfeldt-Jacob-like syndrome has been observed during tricyclic antidepressant therapy, but no evidence of interaction of these drugs with lysosomal function has been reported during such treatment. We report a case of dementia, myoclonus, peripheral neuropathy, and lipid storage in the skin due to antidepressant drug therapy, in which the discontinuation of drugs resulted in an improvement of clinical and electrophysiologic signs together with reduction of morphological evidence of lipid lysosomal storage.
European Neurology | 1991
M. Mondelli; Giuseppe Ciacci; S. Parlanti; Chiara Scarpini; G. Vignocchi; Alessandro Rossi
We report the electrophysiological findings of the central and peripheral somatosensory pathways in 20 patients with olivopontocerebellar atrophy. Changes in sensory action potentials of the median nerve were observed in 14 patients and consisted of reduced sensory potential amplitudes associated in 10 cases with an increase in distal latencies. Sixteen out of 20 patients also showed changes in somatosensory evoked potentials after stimulation of the median nerve, consisting of decreased amplitude of N13 (13 cases) and N20 (16 cases) components, associated with increased N9-N13 interpeak latency in 9 and N13-N20 in 14 patients. The origin of these alterations is discussed.