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Dive into the research topics where Giuseppe Fariello is active.

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Featured researches published by Giuseppe Fariello.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2011

Gray matter decrease distribution in the early stages of Anorexia Nervosa restrictive type in adolescents.

Santino Gaudio; Federico Nocchi; Tiziana Franchin; Elisabetta Genovese; Vittorio Cannatà; Daniela Longo; Giuseppe Fariello

Few studies have used Voxel-Based Morphometry (VBM) to examine brain structure in Anorexia Nervosa patients. The purpose of the present study was to investigate a sample of Anorexia Nervosa restrictive type (AN-r) adolescent patients in the early stages of the illness, using VBM in order to characterize morphometric gray matter (GM) changes. Participants were 16 AN-r female patients (with no other psychiatric disorders) whose AN-r had been in progress for less than 12 months and 16 age-matched healthy female subjects. High-resolution T1-weighted magnetic resonance images were preprocessed according to the optimized VBM method, and statistically analyzed. The analyses revealed a significant global GM decrease in the AN-r patients; furthermore, a significant region-specific decrease in GM volume was found bilaterally in the middle cingulate cortex, the precuneus, and the inferior and superior parietal lobules. The significant early GM decrease in the aforementioned regions in AN-r adolescent patients suggests that there might be a region-specific GM vulnerability that could play a role in the pathophysiology of the disease. Given that these regions are also involved in the manipulation of mental images and the mental representation of the self, this might explain the presence of a distorted body image in these patients.


Epilepsia | 1993

West Syndrome Due to Perinatal Insults

Raffaella Cusmai; Stefano Ricci; Jean Marc Pinard; Perrine Plouin; Giuseppe Fariello; Olivier Dulac

Summary: Clinical, neuroradiological data and outcome of epilepsy of 32 patients with symptomatic infantile spasms caused by perinatal insults are reported. Neuroradiological investigations showed focal as well as diffuse cerebral lesions. Fifteen children had a porencephalic lesion, 12 had periventricular leukomalacia and five had diffuse bilateral cerebral atrophy, associated with status marmoratus in one child and bilateral ulegyria in another. Eight patients (25%) had epilepsy following West syndrome. In the group of 15 children with porencephalic cysts, the lesion was always unilateral, but topography and extension varied. Eight children had circumscribed cysts involving the rolandic or parieto‐occipital regions, and the outcome of epilepsy was favorable. Seven patients had large lesions involving the frontal lobe, associated with unilateral hemispheric atrophy in four cases. These four children had an unfavorable epilepsy outcome. In the 12 patients with periventricular leukomalacia, all premature, eleven had no seizure relapse after the spasms; one of these children had epilepsy. In the five full‐term patients with bilateral and diffuse cerebral lesions, three children had epilepsy at the last observation. In children with leukomalacia and in patients with localized porencephalic lesions the outcome of epilepsy appears to be better than in patients with diffuse cerebral lesions or in children with extensive porencephalic cysts, particularly those involving the frontal lobe.


Neurology | 2001

Clinical and molecular findings in hyperornithinemia-hyperammonemia-homocitrullinuria syndrome

S. Salvi; Filippo M. Santorelli; Enrico Bertini; Renata Boldrini; C. Meli; A. Donati; Alberto Burlina; Cristiano Rizzo; M. Di Capua; Giuseppe Fariello; Carlo Dionisi-Vici

The authors report the clinical and molecular findings in eight patients with hyperornithinemia, hyperammonemia, and homocitrullinuria (HHH) syndrome. The most consistent neurologic finding was spastic paraparesis, seen in five of the eight patients. However, all showed signs of pyramidal tract involvement. A broad spectrum of pathogenetic mutations (including missense, nonsense, splice site, insertion, and deletions) were identified in the ORNT1 gene.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2000

X-linked congenital ataxia: A clinical and genetic study

Enrico Bertini; Vincent des Portes; Ginevra Zanni; Filippo M. Santorelli; Carlo Dionisi-Vici; Stefano Vicari; Giuseppe Fariello; Jamel Chelly

We report on a family in which two males are affected with X-linked congenital ataxia (XCA). Clinical manifestations include severe hypotonia at birth, delay of early motor development, slow eye movements, and nonprogressive cerebellar ataxia. The neurological examination excluded a neuromuscular disease, mental retardation, and pyramidal tract involvement. Neuroimaging showed global cerebellar atrophy in both patients that was not evident in the first years of life. The clinical findings in this family are very similar to those in a Russian pedigree [Illarioskin et al., 1996: Ann Neurol 40:75-83] and outline a recognizable phenotype. Linkage studies in our family, using 28 highly polymorphic Généthon microsatellite markers evenly distributed along the X chromosome, excluded a 24 cM interval between DXS990 and DXS424 located within the previous candidate region of 54 cM, reducing the critical interval.


European Journal of Pediatrics | 1995

Hemimegalencephaly, hemihypertrophy and vascular lesions

A. Cristaldi; Federico Vigevano; G. Antoniazzi; M. di Capua; A. Andreuzzi; G. Morselli; F. Iorio; Giuseppe Fariello; G. Trasimeni; G. F. Gualdi; P. Iannetti

We report on two children with hemihypertrophy and ipsilateral hemimegalencephaly. Vascular lesions in one were consistent with a diagnosis of the Klippel-Trénaunay-Weber Syndrome. MRI performed in the first days of life and at 1 month of age revealed the presence of the neuronal anomaly.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1992

Hemimegalencephaly and normal intellectual development.

L Fusco; S. Ferracuti; Giuseppe Fariello; M. Manfredi; F Vigevano

Hemimegalencephaly is a rare congenital malformation characterised by overgrowth of one hemisphere. Although it is commonly thought to be associated with neurological deficits, developmental delay, and intractable epilepsy, the clinical expression of hemimegalencephaly, can vary widely. This patient was neurologically and neuropsychologically normal apart from rare partial seizures.


Journal of Neuroimaging | 2011

Parry-Romberg Syndrome and Rasmussen Encephalitis: Possible Association. Clinical and Neuroimaging Features

Daniela Longo; Amalia Paonessa; Nicola Specchio; Luciana Nogueira Delfino; Dianela Claps; Lucia Fusco; Francesco Randisi; Elisabetta Genovese; Federico Vigevano; Giuseppe Fariello

Parry‐Romberg syndrome (PRS) is a sporadic disease of unknown etiology with typical onset in childhood or in young adults. It is characterized by a slow and progressive atrophy affecting one side of the face, the skin, the subcutaneous tissue, the muscles, the cartilages, and the underlying bony structures. The neurological symptoms usually include focal epilepsy, migraine, and unilateral brain lesions on the same side as the atrophy. A common neuroimaging finding of the syndrome is white matter high signal intensity on brain magnetic resonance (MR) imaging.


Headache | 2003

Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome, Migraine, and Epilepsy: A Common Underlying Disorder?

Letizia M. Cupini; Filippo M. Santorelli; Cesare Iani; Giuseppe Fariello; Paolo Calabresi

Cyclic vomiting is considered a variant of migraine, first described by Gee in 1881. 1-3 The hallmark feature of cyclic vomiting syndrome (CVS) is recurrent, explosive bouts of vomiting causing time lost from school and work. The attacks of vomiting are interspersed with normal periods. The duration of vomiting episodes is from hours to days, with spontaneous resolution if left untreated. The episodic occurrence of emesis may be precipitated by stress and fatigue. The attacks begin in childhood and often wane in frequency with progression into young and middle adult life. 4 There is some evidence of clinical and physiological overlap between CVS and migraine headaches. 2 Patients with CVS subsequently may develop migraine and may show a positive response to antimigraine medication. Besides migraine, other etiologic possibilities include mitochondrial DNA mutations, 5 ion channelopathies, 6 excessive endocrine dysfunction, 7 heightened autonomic reactivity, 8 and psychiatric disorders. 9 Nevertheless, the etiology and pathogenesis of CVS remain unknown. The differential diagnoses include idiopathic CVS, gastrointestinal disorders, and extraintestinal disorders, including brain stem neoplasm, abdominal epilepsy, and metabolic disorders. We describe a case wherein migraine, epilepsy, and CVS attacks coexisted in a young woman, strongly suggesting a common underlying disease.


Childs Nervous System | 1994

Benign epilepsy of childhood with centrotemporal spikes and unilateral developmental opercular dysplasia

Paola Iannetti; Umberto Raucci; Luciano A. Basile; Alberto Spalice; Pasquale Parisi; Giuseppe Fariello; Carlo Imperato

The case of a 15-year-old right-handed girl with developmental delay, mild retardation, astereognosis, and tactile discrimination impairment in the left arm, is reported. During sleep, right partial simple motor seizures with sialorrhea and saliva pooling were present, sometimes followed by secondary generalization. Absences and drop attacks were also observed. Electroencephalography revealed left centrotemporal spike waves spreading to the homologous contralateral region, generalized 3-Hz spike-and-wave complexes enhanced by hyperventilation, and generalized polyspike-and-wave discharges during drowsiness. Magnetic resonance imaging showed right perisylvian (opercular) malformation. Benign epilepsy of childhood with centrotemporal spikes (BECCTS) is a focal idiopathic epilepsy presumed to be of genetic origin. Although brain damage is not expected, structural lesions including opercular macrogyria have been reported. This coexistence has been considered mainly casual and only exceptionally causal. The Foix-Chavany-Marie syndrome or operculum syndrome is the result of bilateral opercular damage. In our child the right structural and the left functional lesions appeared mutually activated, yielding a transient opercular syndrome. The concomitance of BECCTS and developmental opercular dysplasia is suggestive of a common genetic substratum.


American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2010

Dorsal Brain Stem Syndrome: MR Imaging Location of Brain Stem Tegmental Lesions in Neonates with Oral Motor Dysfunction

C.C. Quattrocchi; Daniela Longo; L.N. Delfino; Maria Roberta Cilio; Fiammetta Piersigilli; M.D. Capua; G. Seganti; Olivier Danhaive; Giuseppe Fariello

SUMMARY: The anatomic extent of brain stem damage may provide information about clinical outcome and prognosis in children with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy and oral motor dysfunction. The aim of this study was to retrospectively characterize the location and extent of brain stem lesions in children with oral motor dysfunction. From January 2005 to August 2009, 43 infants hospitalized at our institution were included in the study because of a history of hypoxic-ischemic events. Of this group, 14 patients showed oral motor dysfunction and brain stem tegmental lesions detected at MR imaging. MR imaging showed hypoxic-ischemic lesions in supra- and infratentorial areas. Six of 14 patients revealed only infratentorial lesions. Focal symmetric lesions of the tegmental brain stem were always present. The lesions appeared hyperintense on T2-weighted images and hypointense on IR images. We found a strong association (P < .0001) between oral motor dysfunction and infratentorial lesions on MR imaging. Oral motor dysfunction was associated with brain stem tegmental lesions in posthypoxic-ischemic infants. The MR imaging examination should be directed to the brain stem, especially when a condition of prolonged gavage feeding is necessary in infants.

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Daniela Longo

Boston Children's Hospital

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Cinzia Orazi

Boston Children's Hospital

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Federico Vigevano

Boston Children's Hospital

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Enrico Bertini

Boston Children's Hospital

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Laura Menchini

Boston Children's Hospital

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Saverio Malena

Boston Children's Hospital

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Stefano Ricci

Boston Children's Hospital

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