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Dive into the research topics where Lorenzo Pavone is active.

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Featured researches published by Lorenzo Pavone.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1997

Identification and Analysis of Mutations in the Wilson Disease Gene (ATP7B): Population Frequencies, Genotype-Phenotype Correlation, and Functional Analyses

Anjali B. Shah; Igor Chernov; Hong Tao Zhang; Barbara M. Ross; Kamna Das; Svetlana Lutsenko; Enrico Parano; Lorenzo Pavone; Oleg V. Evgrafov; Irina A. Ivanova-Smolenskaya; Göran Annerén; Kerstin Westermark; Francisco Hevia Urrutia; Graciela K. Penchaszadeh; Irmin Sternlieb; I. Herbert Scheinberg; T. Conrad Gilliam; Konstantin Petrukhin

Wilson disease (WD) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by toxic accumulation of copper in the liver and subsequently in the brain and other organs. On the basis of sequence homology to known genes, the WD gene (ATP7B) appears to be a copper-transporting P-type ATPase. A search for ATP7B mutations in WD patients from five population samples, including 109 North American patients, revealed 27 distinct mutations, 18 of which are novel. A composite of published findings shows missense mutations in all exons-except in exons 1-5, which encode the six copper-binding motifs, and in exon 21, which spans the carboxy-terminus and the poly(A) tail. Over one-half of all WD mutations occur only rarely in any population sample. A splice-site mutation in exon 12 accounts for 3% of the WD mutations in our sample and produces an in-frame, 39-bp insertion in mRNA of patients homozygous, but not heterozygous, for the mutation. The most common WD mutation (His1069Glu) was represented in approximately 38% of all the WD chromosomes from the North American, Russian, and Swedish samples. In several population cohorts, this mutation deviated from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, with an overrepresentation of homozygotes. We did not find a significant correlation between His1069Glu homozygosity and several clinical indices, including age of onset, clinical manifestation, ceruloplasmin activity, hepatic copper levels, and the presence of Kayser-Fleischer rings. Finally, lymphoblast cell lines from individuals homozygous for His1069Glu and 4 other mutations all demonstrated significantly decreased copper-stimulated ATPase activity.


Neurology | 1999

MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS IN CHILDREN UNDER 6 YEARS OF AGE

Martino Ruggieri; Agata Polizzi; Lorenzo Pavone; Luigi M.E. Grimaldi

Objectives: To characterize MS patients with the earliest onset of disease. Background: MS—primarily a disease of young adulthood—begins in childhood in 3 to 5% of cases. However, onset before 10 years of age is considered exceptional. Accordingly, inclusion age at onset is generally between 10 and 59 years. Methods: Information was obtained on patients with MS treated at our institution (n = 6) or from reports in Medline or bibliographies. Onset of disease was before 6 years of age, for a total of 49 patients (29 girls, 20 boys). Results: All patients had clinically defined MS according to Poser’s criteria; 22 were also laboratory supported. The female/male ratio (1.4) was lower than that usually recorded for adult onset MS (2.0) and that of MS with onset between 6 and 15 years (2.2 to 3.0). The group of patients (n = 5) with onset before 24 months of age showed the lowest ratio (0.6) and carried the most unfavorable prognosis. Among initial symptoms, ataxia was preponderant (61%). Optic nerve involvement became more frequent with age. Generalized or partial seizures occurred in 22% of cases. First inter-attack interval was less than 1 year in 63% of the cases. The yearly relapse rate ranged from 1.1 at disease onset to 0.2 after 9 years from disease onset. At follow-up (mean length 6.8 years), the disease was relapsing-remitting in 84% patients and the grade of recovery was complete in 64%. Conclusions: Definite MS can be consistently diagnosed by current criteria for adult onset MS in patients with the earliest onset of disease who show peculiar clinical features and natural history. These findings may suggest a reconsideration of current lower limits for MS diagnostic criteria.


Neurology | 1991

Epidermal nevus syndrome: a neurologic variant with hemimegalencephaly, gyral malformation, mental retardation, seizures, and facial hemihypertrophy.

Lorenzo Pavone; Paolo Curatolo; Renata Rizzo; G. Micali; Gemma Incorpora; Bhuwan P. Garg; D. W. Dunn; William B. Dobyns

The epidermal nevus syndrome (ENS) is a sporadic neurocutaneous disorder that consists of epidermal nevi and congenital anomalies involving the brain and other systems. From among over 60 patients with ENS presenting with neurologic manifestations, we identified 17 who had hemimegalencephaly based on pathologic or radiologic studies. Associated brain and neurologic abnormalities included gyral malformations in 12 of 12, mental retardation in 13 of 14, seizures in 16 of 17 (including 9 with infantile spasms), and contralateral hemiparesis in 7 of 12. All had ipsilateral epidermal nevi of the head, and several had ipsilateral facial hemihypertrophy. We concluded that these abnormalities comprise a recognizable neurologic variant of ENS that we believe represents the full expression of primary brain involvement. Several patients also had evidence of acquired brain lesions such as infarcts, atrophy, porencephaly, and calcifications, which are best explained by prior ischemia or hemorrhage. Given repeated observations of blood vessel anomalies in ENS patients, we hypothesize that underlying vascular dysplasia predisposes to these acquired lesions. The same cause may be invoked to explain the wide variety of neurologic symptoms reported in ENS patients without hemimegalencephaly. While the cause of ENS remains unknown, several observations suggest a somatic mutation.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2003

Autism and Phenylketonuria

Sabrina Baieli; Lorenzo Pavone; Concetta Meli; Agata Fiumara; Mary Coleman

Phenylketonuria (PKU) has been also reported in children with infantile autism (IA); however, the frequency of this association is variably reported. Patients with various forms of hyperphenylalaninemia (HPA) were evaluated applying two methods: the Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised (ADI-R) and the Childhood Autism Rating Scale (CARS). A total of 243 patients were investigated, 97 with classical PKU, 62 identified by neonatal screening, and 35 late diagnosed. None out of 62 patients with classic PKU diagnosed early met criteria for autism. In the group of 35 patients diagnosed late, two boys (5.71%) ages 16 and 13 years fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for autism. The present study confirms that classical PKU is one of the causes of autism, but the prevalence seems to be very low.


Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology | 2010

The neurology of coeliac disease in childhood: what is the evidence? A systematic review and meta‐analysis

Elena Lionetti; Ruggiero Francavilla; Piero Pavone; Lorenzo Pavone; T. Francavilla; Alfredo Pulvirenti; Rosalba Giugno; Martino Ruggieri

Aim  The aim of this article was to review and conduct a meta‐analysis of the paediatric literature on the neurology of coeliac disease.


Neurological Sciences | 2004

Multiple sclerosis in children under 10 years of age.

Martino Ruggieri; Paola Iannetti; Agata Polizzi; Lorenzo Pavone; Luigi M.E. Grimaldi

Abstract.Despite the consistent amount of information accumulated in recent years on multiple sclerosis (MS) in childhood, many clinicians still view this condition as an exclusively young adult-onset disease and do not consider that it may occur and manifest even during infancy and pre-school age, suggesting that the number of MS cases in the paediatric age group may have been underestimated. Thus, the need to have practical parameters for therapeutic, counselling and educational purposes in such settings as caring for patients whose onset of disease is at very early ages may increasingly arise for practising clinicians. In addition, the clinical and radiographic criteria for the diagnosis of MS have not been validated in a paediatric MS population; accordingly, inclusion age at onset (such as for research purposes) is generally over 10 years. To highlight the peculiarities that characterise MS when it begins at this young age we have reviewed the literature and summarised our preliminary results with the national registry of the Italian Society of Paediatric Neurology (SINP) Study Group on Childhood MS in the group of MS patients with the earliest onset of disease (i. e., <10 years of age).


Helicobacter | 2010

Role of Probiotics in Pediatric Patients with Helicobacter pylori Infection: A Comprehensive Review of the Literature

Elena Lionetti; Flavia Indrio; Lorenzo Pavone; Giorgia Borrelli; Luciano Cavallo; Ruggiero Francavilla

Background:  The current guidelines suggest the use of triple therapy as first choice treatment of Helicobacter pylori infection, although the eradication failure rate is more than 30%. Current interest in probiotics as therapeutic agents against H. pylori is stimulated not only by the clinical data showing efficacy of some probiotics in different gastrointestinal diseases but also by the increasing resistance of pathogenic bacteria to antibiotics, thus the interest for alternative therapies is a real actual topic.


Epilepsia | 2003

Two Novel SCN1A Missense Mutations in Generalized Epilepsy with Febrile Seizures Plus

Grazia Annesi; Antonio Gambardella; Sara Carrideo; Gemma Incorpora; Angelo Labate; Angela Aurora Pasqua; Donatella Civitelli; Agata Polizzi; Ferdinanda Annesi; Patrizia Spadafora; Patrizia Tarantino; Innocenza Claudia Cirò Candiano; Nelide Romeo; Elvira Valeria De Marco; Patrizia Ventura; Emilio LePiane; Mario Zappia; Umberto Aguglia; Lorenzo Pavone; Aldo Quattrone

) for muta-tions in SCN1A, SCN1B, and GABRG2 genes (1–3).Probands were ascertained from the clinical practice inthree epilepsy centers in southern Italy. Detailed familypedigrees were constructed, including maternal and pa-ternal lines extending as far back as possible. In the ninefamilies, we investigated 110 members of whom 37 indi-viduals were determined to be affected. Most patients hadfebrile seizures (FSs) or FS plus (FS


Brain & Development | 2014

Infantile spasms syndrome, West syndrome and related phenotypes: What we know in 2013

Piero Pavone; Pasquale Striano; Raffaele Falsaperla; Lorenzo Pavone; Martino Ruggieri

The current spectrum of disorders associated to clinical spasms with onset in infancy is wider than previously thought; accordingly, its terminology has changed. Nowadays, the term Infantile spasms syndrome (ISs) defines an epileptic syndrome occurring in children younger than 1 year (rarely older than 2 years), with clinical (epileptic: i.e., associated to an epileptiform EEG) spasms usually occurring in clusters whose most characteristic EEG finding is hypsarrhythmia [the spasms are often associated with developmental arrest or regression]. The term West syndrome (WS) refers to a form (a subset) of ISs, characterised by the combination of clustered spasms and hypsarrhythmia on an EEG and delayed brain development or regression [currently, it is no longer required that delayed development occur before the onset of spasms]. Less usually, spasms may occur singly rather than in clusters [infantile spasms single-spasm variant (ISSV)], hypsarrhythmia can be (incidentally) recorded without any evidence of clinical spasms [hypsarrhythmia without infantile spasms (HWIS)] or typical clinical spasms may manifest in absence of hypsarrhythmia [infantile spasms without hypsarrhythmia (ISW)]. There is a growing evidence that ISs and related phenotypes may result, besides from acquired events, from disturbances in key genetic pathways of brain development: specifically, in the gene regulatory network of GABAergic forebrain dorsal-ventral development, and abnormalities in molecules expressed at the synapse. Children with these genetic associations also have phenotypes beyond epilepsy, including dysmorphic features, autism, movement disorders and systemic malformations. The prognosis depends on: (a) the cause, which gives origin to the attacks (the complex malformation forms being more severe); (b) the EEG pattern(s); (c) the appearance of seizures prior to the spasms; and (d) the rapid response to treatment. Currently, the first-line treatment includes the adrenocorticotropic hormone ACTH and vigabatrin. In the near future the gold standard could be the development of new therapies that target specific pathways of pathogenesis. In this article we review the past and growing number of clinical, genetic, molecular and therapeutic discoveries on this expanding topic.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1996

Clinical and neuroradiological findings in classic infantile and late‐onset globoid‐cell leukodystrophy (Krabbe disease)

Rita Barone; K. Brühl; P. Stoeter; Agata Fiumara; Lorenzo Pavone; Michael Beck

In the present study the clinical course and imaging of early and late-onset forms of Krabbe disease are analyzed. We report on 11 patients with a biochemical diagnosis of galactosyl ceramide beta-galactoside deficiency. Two presented as the classic infantile form and died within the second year of life. In 9 children the first clinical signs, such as gait difficulties and visual failure, started after age 2 years. All these patients developed slow regression of motor and mental capacities, and most of them died within their first decade. In patients of both groups computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were performed. In the late-onset form, hypodensities of the central white matter and pyramidal tracts were the leading radiological signs, whereas in the early-onset form, hyperdensities and cerebellar white matter lesions were also detected. From our results it becomes clear that variability of Krabbe disease refers not only to clinical manifestation but also to CT and MRI findings. Better knowledge of phenotypic and radiological diversity will help to understand the pathogenesis of the disease.

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Enrico Parano

National Research Council

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Agata Polizzi

National Research Council

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