Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Guido Gainotti is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Guido Gainotti.


European Neurology | 1996

The Mental Deterioration Battery: Normative Data, Diagnostic Reliability and Qualitative Analyses of Cognitive Impairment

Giovanni Augusto Carlesimo; Carlo Caltagirone; Guido Gainotti; Lucia Fadda; R. Gallassi; S. Lorusso; G. Marfia; Camillo Marra; U. Nocentini; Lucilla Parnetti

This study aimed at investigating the clinical usefulness of the Mental Deterioration Battery (MDB) in the neuropsychological diagnosis and characterization of the dementia syndrome. In this paper, we report: (a) normative data for various test scores derived from the analysis of performance of 340 normal subjects living in urban areas; (b) an evaluation of the reliability of the single tests and of the battery as a whole in differentiating normal subjects from patients affected by cognitive deterioration derived from the analysis of performance of 130 normal subjects living in rural areas and 134 patients affected by probable Alzheimers dementia; (c) a cluster analysis of performances of the 340 normal subjects in the standardization group to evaluate possible criteria of homogeneity according to which the various MDB scores tend to aggregate; (d) an analysis of performance profiles of 183 patients with right monohemispheric focal lesions, 159 patients with left unilateral lesions with aphasia and 131 left-lesioned nonaphasic patients to evaluate the specificity of the single tests of the battery in documenting a selective impairment of one of the two cerebral hemispheres. Results confirm the reliability of the MBD in discriminating between normal and demented patients and provide indications for use of the battery in differentiating qualitative patterns of cognitive impairment.


Neuropsychologia | 1994

Evidence for a possible neuroanatomical basis for lexical processing of nouns and verbs

Antonio Daniele; Laura Giustolisi; M.Caterina Silveri; Cesare Colosimo; Guido Gainotti

Neuropsychological studies have revealed that brain-damaged patients may show impairments of specific word categories. This study reports the performance of three patients with impairments of the categories noun and verb. The first and second patients, with left frontal lobe atrophy, were impaired in naming and comprehension of verbs. The third patient, with striking atrophy of the left temporal lobe, was disproportionately impaired in naming and comprehension of nouns. These findings suggest that anatomically distinct neural systems in the temporal and frontal lobes of the dominant hemisphere might play a critical role in lexical processing of nouns and verbs, respectively.


European Journal of Neurology | 2010

EFNS guidelines for the diagnosis and management of Alzheimer’s disease

J. Hort; John T. O'Brien; Guido Gainotti; T. Pirttilä; B.O. Popescu; Irena Rektorová; Sandro Sorbi; Philip Scheltens

Background and objectives:  In 2008 a task force was set up to develop a revision of the European Federation of the Neurological Societies (EFNS) guideline for the diagnosis and management of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and other disorders associated with dementia, published in early 2007. The aim of this revised international guideline was to present a peer‐reviewed evidence‐based statement for the guidance of practice for clinical neurologists, geriatricians, psychiatrists, and other specialist physicians responsible for the care of patients with AD. Mild cognitive impairment and non‐Alzheimer dementias are not included in this guideline.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2004

Motor cortex hyperexcitability to transcranial magnetic stimulation in Alzheimer’s disease

V. Di Lazzaro; Antonio Oliviero; F. Pilato; E. Saturno; Michele Dileone; Camillo Marra; Antonio Daniele; Stefano Ghirlanda; Guido Gainotti; Pietro Tonali

Objectives: Recent transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) studies demonstrate that motor cortex excitability is increased in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and that intracortical inhibitory phenomena are impaired. The aim of the present study was to determine whether hyperexcitability is due to the impairment of intracortical inhibitory circuits or to an independent abnormality of excitatory circuits. Methods: We assessed the excitability of the motor cortex with TMS in 28 patients with AD using several TMS paradigms and compared the data of cortical excitability (evaluated by measuring resting motor threshold) with the amount of motor cortex disinhibition as evaluated using the test for motor cortex cholinergic inhibition (short latency afferent inhibition) and GABAergic inhibition (short latency intracortical inhibition). The data in AD patients were also compared with that from 12 age matched healthy individuals. Results: The mean resting motor threshold was significantly lower in AD patients than in controls. The amount of short latency afferent inhibition was significantly smaller in AD patients than in normal controls. There was also a tendency for AD patients to have less pronounced short latency intracortical inhibition than controls, but this difference was not significant. There was no correlation between resting motor threshold and measures of either short latency afferent or intracortical inhibition (r = −0.19 and 0.18 respectively, NS). In 14 AD patients the electrophysiological study was repeated after a single oral dose of the cholinesterase inhibitor rivastigmine. Resting motor threshold was not significantly modified by the administration of rivastigmine. In contrast, short latency afferent inhibition from the median nerve was significantly increased by the administration of rivastigmine. Conclusions: The change in threshold did not seem to correlate with dysfunction of inhibitory intracortical cholinergic and GABAergic circuits, nor with the central cholinergic activity. We propose that the hyperexcitability of the motor cortex is caused by an abnormality of intracortical excitatory circuits.


Cognition & Emotion | 1993

Left/right and cortical/subcortical dichotomies in the neuropsychological study of human emotions

Guido Gainotti; Carlo Caltagirone; Pierluigi Zoccolotti

Abstract Two main dichotomies have been put forth in the study of the anatomical substrates of emotional behaviour. The first, more classical and more firmly established, claims that the basic brain mechanisms for emotions are located in subcortical rather than in cortical structures. The second, more recent and still more hypothetical dichotomy, maintains that the right and the left hemispheres are not equally involved in emotional behaviour and that the right hemisphere plays a critical role in this regard. It is not clear, however, if these two dichotomies are independent or are somehow interconnected. The aim of this article is to discuss some aspects of the neuropsychology of human emotions, taking into account both the cortical/subcortical and the left/right dichotomy. First, we will review some well-established facts and some more recent models and data concerning the role played by cortical and subcortical structures in various aspects of emotional behaviour. Secondly, we will present a short summ...


Neurology | 1991

Dissociation between knowledge of living and nonliving things in dementia of the Alzheimer type

Maria Caterina Silveri; Antonio Daniele; Laura Giustolisi; Guido Gainotti

Patients who survive herpes simplex encephalitis (HSE) sometimes present a category-specific disorder for living things. Since HSE specifically involves the temporolimbic structures of both hemispheres, these structures could play a critical role in processing and storing information about living things. If this were the case, a category-specific disorder for the same items should also be observed in the early stages of dementia of the Alzheimer type (DAT) as the temporolimbic structures are often severely affected in this condition. To test this hypothesis, we administered to 15 DAT patients and to 10 normal controls a confrontation-naming task and a verbal associates recognition task, with both living and nonliving items as stimuli. The hypothesis was confirmed, since DAT patients performed worse with living than with nonliving items, and scored worse than normal controls on the living but not the nonliving items.


Brain and Language | 1976

Comprehension of symbolic gestures in aphasia.

Guido Gainotti; Maria Assunta Lemmo

Abstract One-hundred-and-twenty-eight patients with unilateral hemispheric damage (53 aphasics, 26 nonaphasic left, and 49 right brain-damaged patients) and 25 normal controls were given a test of symbolic gesture comprehension and other tests of verbal comprehension and of reproduction of symbolic gestures. On the test of symbolic gesture interpretation aphasic patients performed significantly worse than any other group of brain-damaged patients. Within the aphasic patients the inability to understand the meaning of symbolic gestures was highly related to the number of semantic errors obtained at a verbal comprehension test. On the contrary, only a mild relationship was found between comprehension and reproduction of symbolic gestures. Some implications of these findings are discussed.


Neurology | 1994

The relationship between visuospatial and representational neglect

Paolo Bartolomeo; Patrizia D'Erme; Guido Gainotti

Using a quantitative measure, we analyzed the relationship between visuospatial and representational neglect in right- and left-brain-damaged patients and found signs of representational neglect only in right-brain-damaged patients. Although representational neglect was always associated with visuospatial neglect, suggesting that the two forms share a common underlying mechanism, the most frequent finding in right-brain-damaged patients was that of visuospatial neglect in isolation. A strong influence of the phenomenon of attentional attraction toward space ipsilateral to the lesion in visuospatial, as opposed to imaginal, tasks can account for this finding.


Cognitive Neuropsychology | 1996

Cognitive and Anatomical Locus of Lesion in a Patient with a Category-specific Semantic Impairment for Living Beings

Guido Gainotti; Maria Caterina Silveri

The goal of this study was two fold and consisted of:(a) reassessing the extent and the nature of the cognitive defect shown by a post-encephalitic patient (LA) previously reported as showing a category-specific impairment for living beings; (b) obtaining a more precise picture of the underlying anatomical lesions. The experimental study of the cognitive disorders of LA has given the follow ing results: 1. Her category-specific semantic impairment for living beings still persisted even when the influence of confounding factors (such as word frequency or stimulus familiarity) was controlled. Her performance, however, was disproportionately influenced by familiarity factors. 2. The pattern of impaired and spared semantic categories was very similar to that observed by other authors and taken as proof that the “living/nonliving” dichotomy suffers from important, systematic exceptions. Within the “living” categories, “body parts” were selectively spared, whereas within the “nonliving” categories “food” and “m...


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 1981

Neuropsychological correlates of localized cerebral lesions in non-aphasic brain-damaged patients

Gabriele Miceli; Carlo Caltagirone; Guido Gainotti; Carlo Masullo; Maria Caterina Silveri

A neuropsychological test battery made up of verbal, visual-spatial, and intelligence tests was administered to 82 right and 67 on-aphasic left brain-damaged patients with localized cerebral lesions, in order to draw impairment profiles of the various subgroups. Separate analyses were undertaken on patients with unilobar and multilobar lesions. As for hemisphere effects, LH patients performed worse than RH subjects on verbal tests, while the reverse was true for visual-spatial tasks. As for lobe effects, patients with frontal lobe damage fared worse than other subgroups on word fluency, independent of the side of the lesion. RH patients with multilobar posterior lesions were significantly more impaired than other RH subgroups on the test of Copying Drawings with Landmarks, probably owing to the detrimental effect of unilateral spatial neglect on tasks requiring an accurate visual-spatial analysis.

Collaboration


Dive into the Guido Gainotti's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Camillo Marra

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Davide Quaranta

The Catholic University of America

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Antonio Daniele

The Catholic University of America

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carlo Masullo

The Catholic University of America

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carlo Caltagirone

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Giampiero Villa

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. Caltagirone

The Catholic University of America

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Maria Gabriella Vita

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chiara Piccininni

The Catholic University of America

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge