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Dive into the research topics where Luciana Losito is active.

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Featured researches published by Luciana Losito.


Clinical Genetics | 2012

Mutations in the motor and stalk domains of KIF5A in spastic paraplegia type 10 and in axonal Charcot–Marie–Tooth type 2

Claudia Crimella; C Baschirotto; Alessia Arnoldi; Alessandra Tonelli; E Tenderini; Giovanni Airoldi; Andrea Martinuzzi; Antonio Trabacca; Luciana Losito; Marina Scarlato; Sara Benedetti; E Scarpini; G Spinicci; Nereo Bresolin; Maria Teresa Bassi

Crimella C, Baschirotto C, Arnoldi A, Tonelli A, Tenderini E, Airoldi G, Martinuzzi A, Trabacca A, Losito L, Scarlato M, Benedetti S, Scarpini E, Spinicci G, Bresolin N, Bassi MT. Mutations in the motor and stalk domains of KIF5A in spastic paraplegia type 10 and in axonal Charcot–Marie–Tooth type 2.


Neuroscience Letters | 2002

Abnormal brain processing of cutaneous pain in migraine patients during the attack.

Marina de Tommaso; Marco Guido; Giuseppe Libro; Luciana Losito; Vittorio Sciruicchio; Carlo Monetti; Francomichele Puca

We examined cutaneous pain thresholds using CO(2) laser stimuli during migraine attacks, and defined the evoked cortical potential characteristics. Ten patients without aura were studied during attacks and for at least 72 h subsequently. Pain stimuli were generated on the dorsum of both hands and the right and left supraorbital zones, using pulses from a CO(2) laser. Absolute latencies of scalp potentials were measured at the highest peak of each response component, and the peak-to-peak amplitudes of N2a-P2 components were recorded. Cutaneous pain thresholds were significantly reduced on both the symptomatic and non-symptomatic sides during the attack, in comparison with the headache-free phase. The N2a-P2 complexes also increased in amplitude during attacks in comparison with the pain-free side. Thus, cutaneous hyperalgesia occurs during migraine attack, and is subtended by central sensitization phenomena, probably involving the cortex.


Journal of Headache and Pain | 2005

Habituation of single CO2 laser–evoked responses during interictal phase of migraine

M. de Tommaso; Giuseppe Libro; Marco Guido; Luciana Losito; Paolo Lamberti; Paolo Livrea

A reduced habituation of averaged laser–evoked potential (LEP) amplitudes was previously found in migraine patients. The aim of the present study was to assess the habituation of single LEP responses and pain sensation during the interictal phase in migraine patients. Fourteen migraine patients were compared with ten control subjects. The pain stimulus was laser pulses, generated by CO2 laser, delivered to right supraorbital zone. Patients were evaluated during attack–free conditions. The LEP habituation was studied by measuring the changes of LEP amplitudes across and within three consecutive repetitions of 21 non–averaged trials. In migraine patients the N2–P2 wave amplitudes did not show a tendency toward habituation across and, above all, within the three repetitions. Anomalous behaviour of nociceptive cortex during the interictal phase of migraine may predispose patients to headache occurrence and persistence.


Headache | 2005

Changes in Cortical Processing of Pain in Chronic Migraine

Marina de Tommaso; Luciana Losito; Olimpia Difruscolo; Giuseppe Libro; Marco Guido; Paolo Livrea

Objective.—The aim of this study was to perform a topographic and dipolar analysis of nociceptive‐evoked responses obtained by laser stimulus under basal conditions in a cohort of chronic migraine (CM) patients, compared with migraine without aura (MWA) patients and noncraniofacial pain controls.


Headache | 2004

Topographic and dipolar analysis of laser-evoked potentials during migraine attack.

Marina de Tommaso; Marco Guido; Giuseppe Libro; Luciana Losito; Olimpia Difruscolo; Francomichele Puca; Luigi Maria Specchio; A. Carella

Objective.—The aim of this study was to perform further evaluation of laser‐evoked potentials (LEPs) during migraine attacks using multichannel recording and topographic analysis. Specifically, this study aimed to confirm the pattern previously observed in acute migraine, while also defining the components of LEPs that are mainly modified during headache, as well as the correlation between features of LEPs and clinical variables. In addition, we aimed to conduct a dipolar source analysis of the main LEP waves in migraine patients to check the variability in the source location of LEPs during acute migraine.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2010

The GST domain of GDAP1 is a frequent target of mutations in the dominant form of axonal Charcot Marie Tooth type 2K

Claudia Crimella; Alessandra Tonelli; Giovanni Airoldi; Cinzia Baschirotto; Maria Grazia D'Angelo; S. Bonato; Luciana Losito; Antonio Trabacca; Nereo Bresolin; M. T. Bassi

Background Mutations in GDAP1 associate with demyelinating (CMT4A) and axonal (CMT2K) forms of CMT. While CMT4A shows recessive inheritance, CMT2K can present with either recessive (AR-CMT2K) or dominant segregation pattern (AD-CMT2K), the latter being characterised by milder phenotypes and later onset. The majority of the GDAP1 mutations are associated with CMT4A and AR-CMT2K, with only four heterozygous mutations identified in AD-CMT2K. Methods We screened GDAP1 gene in a series of 43 index patients, 39 with CMT2 and 4 with intermediate CMT, with sporadic and familial occurrence of the disease. Results Three novel mutations were identified in three families with dominant segregation of the disease: two missense changes, p.Arg226Ser and p.Ser34Cys, affecting the GST domain of the GDAP1 protein and a novel deletion (c.23delAG) leading to early truncation of the protein upstream the GST domain. Wide variability in clinical presentation is shared by all three families mostly in terms of age at onset and disease severity. A rare variant p.Gly269Arg, located within the GST domain, apparently acts as phenotype modulator in the family carrying the deletion. Conclusion The results obtained reveal a GDAP1 mutation frequency of 27% in the dominant families analysed, a figure still unreported for this gene, thus suggesting that GDAP1 involvement in dominant CMT2 might be higher than expected.


Neuroscience Letters | 2004

Nitroglycerin induces migraine headache and central sensitization phenomena in patients with migraine without aura: a study of laser evoked potentials

Marina de Tommaso; Giuseppe Libro; Marco Guido; Olimpia Difruscolo; Luciana Losito; Michele Sardaro; Rosanna Cerbo

In migraineurs nitroglycerin (NTG) induces severe delayed headache, resembling spontaneous migraine attacks. The aim of the present study was to evaluate NTG laser evoked potentials (LEP) features amplitude and pain sensation to laser stimuli during NTG-induced headache. Nine patients were selected. Headache was induced by oral administration of 0.6 mg of NTG; signals were recorded through disk electrodes placed at the vertex and referred to linked earlobes. CO(2)-LEPs delivered by stimulation of the dorsum of both hands and the right and left supraorbital zones were evaluated after the onset of moderate or severe headache resembling spontaneous migraine and at least 72 h after the end of the headache phase. Patients exhibited a significant heat pain threshold reduction and an LEPs amplitude increment during headache when both the supraorbital zones were stimulated. NTG appeared to support a reliable experimental model of migraine, based on the neuronal effects on the integrative-nociceptive structures. The LEPs facilitation during NTG-induced headache may be subtended by a hyperactivity of nociceptive cortex as well as by a failure of pain-inhibitory control.


Neuroscience Letters | 2003

High and low frequency transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation inhibits nociceptive responses induced by CO2 laser stimulation in humans.

Marina de Tommaso; Pietro Fiore; Alfonso Camporeale; Marco Guido; Giuseppe Libro; Luciana Losito; Marisa Megna; Francomichele Puca; Gianfranco Megna

The aim of the study was to evaluate the effects of transcutaneous electric nerve stimulation (TENS) on CO(2) laser evoked potentials (LEPs) in 16 normal subjects. The volar side of the forearm was stimulated by 10 Hz TENS in eight subjects and by 100 Hz TENS in the remainder; the skin of the forearm was stimulated by CO(2) laser and the LEPs were recorded in basal conditions and soon after and 15 min after TENS. Both low and high frequency TENS significantly reduced the subjective rating of heat stimuli and the LEPs amplitude, although high frequency TENS appeared more efficacious. TENS seemed to exert a mild inhibition of the perception and processing of pain induced by laser Adelta fibres activation; the implications of these effects in the clinical employment of TENS remain to be clarified.


Cephalalgia | 2005

Effects of symptomatic treatments on cutaneous hyperalgesia and laser evoked potentials during migraine attack

M. de Tommaso; Luciana Losito; Giuseppe Libro; Marco Guido; O Di fruscolo; Michele Sardaro; Vittorio Sciruicchio; Paolo Lamberti; Paolo Livrea

Previously an amplitude enhancement of laser evoked potentials (LEPs) was detected during migraine attack: we further examined pain threshold to CO2 laser stimuli and LEPs during attacks, evaluating the effect of almotriptan, lysine-acetylsalicylate and placebo treatment on cutaneous hyperalgesia to thermal stimuli delivered by CO2 laser and on LEP components. Eighteen patients suffering from migraine without aura were analysed. They were divided into three groups of six patients each, randomly assigned to lysine acetyl-salicylate, almotriptan or placebo treatments. The supraorbital zones and the dorsum of the hand were stimulated on both the symptomatic and not symptomatic side in all patients. The LEPs were recorded by 25 scalp electrodes During attacks, the P2 wave was significantly enhanced; the amplitude of the P2 component obtained by the stimulation of the supraorbital zone during the attack on the side of the headache was significantly correlated with the intensity of pain and the frequency of headache. Both almotriptan and lysine acetyl-salicylate significantly reduced the P2 amplitude but they showed no effects on hyperalgesia to laser stimulation; headache relief following therapy was correlated with the reduction of the P2 amplitude. The cortical elaboration of laser-induced experimental pain seemed increased during migraine attack, and the severity of headache was mainly related to the increase of the later LEPs components expressing the attentive and emotive compounds of suffering. Reversion of this process appeared to be primarily responsible for the efficacy of drugs in treating migraine, though both almotriptan and lysine-acetil salicilate seemed to have no effect in reducing sensitization at second and third order nociceptive neurons.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2003

Steady-state visual evoked potentials in the low frequency range in migraine: a study of habituation and variability phenomena

Marina de Tommaso; Sebastiano Stramaglia; Jan Mathijs Schoffelen; Marco Guido; Giuseppe Libro; Luciana Losito; Vittorio Sciruicchio; Michele Sardaro; Mario Pellicoro; Franco Michele Puca

Previous studies have revealed that migraine patients display an increased photic driving to flash stimuli in the medium frequency range. The aim of this study was to perform a topographic analysis of steady-state visual evoked potentials (SVEPs) in the low frequency range (3-9 Hz), evaluating the temporal behaviour of the F1 amplitude by investigating habituation and variability phenomena. The main component of SVEPs, the F1, demonstrated an increased amplitude in several channels at 3 Hz. Behaviour of F1 amplitude was rather variable over time, and the wavelet-transform standard deviation was increased in migraine patients at a low stimulus rate. The discriminative value of the F1 mean amplitude and variability index, tested by both an artificial neural network classifier and a support vector machine, were high according to both methods. The increased photic driving in migraine should be subtended by a more generic abnormality of visual reactivity instead of a selective impairment of a visual subsystem. Temporal behaviour of SVEPs is not influenced by a clear tendency to habituation, but the F1 amplitude seemed to change in a complex way, which is better described by variability phenomena. An increased variability in response to flicker stimuli in migraine patients could be interpreted as an overactive regulation mechanism, prone to instability and consequently to headache attacks, whether spontaneous or triggered.

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