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Featured researches published by Nunzia Giordano.


Neuropsychologia | 2011

Hypnosis meets neuropsychology: simulating visuospatial neglect in healthy participants.

Konstantinos Priftis; Sami Schiff; Valérie Tikhonoff; Nunzia Giordano; Piero Amodio; Carlo Umiltà; Edoardo Casiglia

Neglect patients are not aware of stimuli in the contralesional space. We aimed to simulate neglect-like behaviour in healthy participants, by asking them to orient their visuospatial attention in two conditions: non-hypnotic suggestion and post-hypnotic suggestion. Results showed that directing visuospatial attention to one side of space caused neglect of stimuli in the opposite side of space, but only when participants were under post-hypnotic suggestion. Furthermore, directing visuospatial attention to the right side of space caused more neglect of left-sided stimuli than directing visuospatial attention to the left side of space did for right-sided stimuli. We propose that post-hypnotic suggestion can be a useful tool for (de)activating neurocognitive mechanisms underlying visuospatial awareness, a function that is fundamental for our survival. The use of post-hypnotic suggestion could be applied to the study of many domains of cognitive neurosciences (e.g., neurocognitive rehabilitation).


American Journal of Hypertension | 2014

Orthostatic Hypotension Does Not Increase Cardiovascular Risk in the Elderly at a Population Level

Edoardo Casiglia; Valérie Tikhonoff; Sandro Caffi; Giovanni Boschetti; Nunzia Giordano; Federica Guidotti; Federico Segato; Alberto Mazza; Carla Grasselli; Mario Saugo; Giulio Rigoni; Francesco Guglielmi; Bortolo Martini; Paolo Palatini

BACKGROUND The general belief that orthostatic hypotension (OH) predisposes to cardiovascular events is based on sparse and contradictory data, rarely derived from population studies. METHODS A total of 1,016 men and women aged ≥65 years was studied in a 12-year epidemiological population-based study. Cardiovascular events were detected in subjects with and without OH (blood pressure (BP) decrease ≥20mm Hg for systolic or ≥10mm Hg for diastolic), and Cox analysis was performed including OH as an independent variable. RESULTS In univariate analysis, coronary (20.2% vs. 13.1%, P = 0.05), cerebrovascular (13.1% vs. 8.4%, P = 0.05), and heart failure (HF) events (20.2% vs. 13.8%, P = 0.03) were apparently more incidental in subjects with OH than in those without OH. Nevertheless, after adjusting for age, gender, and systolic BP as confounders, OH did not act as a cardiovascular predictor (relative risk for cerebrovascular events 1.33, 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.78-2.2, for coronary events 1.25, CI 0.82-1.88, for HF 1.07, CI 0.71-1.62, for arrhythmias 0.82, CI 0.40-1.37, and for syncope 0.58, CI 0.13-2.71). CONCLUSIONS Although OH seems to be a predictor of coronary, cerebrovascular, and HF events, no predictive role was found in models that include biological confounders. Independent of the cause of OH, age and systolic BP, which are positively associated with OH, fully explain the greater incidence of cardiovascular events and the greater cardiovascular risk observed in subjects with OH.


International Journal of Hypertension | 2012

Cognitive Functions and Cognitive Reserve in Relation to Blood Pressure Components in a Population-Based Cohort Aged 53 to 94 Years

Nunzia Giordano; Valérie Tikhonoff; Paolo Palatini; Anna Bascelli; Giovanni Boschetti; Fabia De Lazzari; Carla Grasselli; Bortolo Martini; Sandro Caffi; Antonio Piccoli; Alberto Mazza; Patrizia Bisiacchi; Edoardo Casiglia

In 288 men and women from general population in a cross-sectional survey, all neuropsychological tests were negatively associated with age; memory and executive function were also positively related with education. The hypertensives (HT) were less efficient than the normotensives (NT) in the test of memory with interference at 10 sec (MI-10) (−33%, P = 0.03), clock drawing test (CLOX) (−28%, P < 0.01), and mini-mental state examination (MMSE) (−6%, P = 0.02). Lower MMSE, MI-10, and CLOX were predicted by higher systolic (odds ratio, OR, 0.97, P = 0.02; OR 0.98, P < 0.005; OR 0.95, P < 0.001) and higher pulse blood pressure (BP) (OR 0.97, P = 0.02; OR 0.97, P < 0.01; and 0.95, P < 0.0001). The cognitive reserve index (CRI) was 6% lower in the HT (P = 0.03) and was predicted by higher pulse BP (OR 0.82, P < 0.001). The BP vectors of lower MMSE, MI-10, and CLOX were directed towards higher values of systolic and diastolic BP, that of low CRI towards higher systolic and lower diastolic. The label of hypertension and higher values of systolic or pulse BP are associated to worse memory and executive functions. Higher diastolic BP, although insufficient to impair cognition, strengthens this association. CRI is predicted by higher systolic BP associated to lower diastolic BP.


Journal of Womens Health | 2011

Dietary Iron Intake and Cardiovascular Outcome in Italian Women: 10-Year Follow-Up

Edoardo Casiglia; Valérie Tikhonoff; Anna Bascelli; Nunzia Giordano; Sandro Caffi; Elisa Andreatta; Alberto Mazza; Giovanni Boschetti; Carla Grasselli; Mario Saugo; Giulio Rigoni; Paolo Spinella; Paolo Palatini

BACKGROUND Both low and high iron levels have been associated with cardiovascular outcome. The aim of this study was to determine if dietary iron intake is a cardiovascular predictor in women at a population level. METHODS A 138-item food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) was administered to 906 women aged 61.1±17.1 years from an unselected general population followed for 10 years. The mass of dietary items was calculated, and each food was resolved into its chemical components according to food composition tables conceived for Italian food. RESULTS An inverse association between iron intake and cardiovascular morbidity was found. Incident nonfatal cerebrovascular events were 10 of 302 (3.3%), 4 of 302 (1.3%), and 2 of 302 (0.7%) in the first, second, and third tertiles of nonheme iron intake (p for trend <0.01), respectively; fatal cerebrovascular events were 20 of 302 (6.6%), 13 of 302 (4.3%), and 5 of 302 (1.7%), respectively (p<0.01); nonfatal coronary events were 24 of 302 (7.9%), 13 of 302 (4.3%), and 10 of 302 (3.3%), respectively, and fatal coronary events were 20 of 302 (6.6%), 15 of 302 (5.0%), and 10 of 302 (3.3%), respectively (p<0.01). Independenly of confounders, hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) of being the first rather than third tertile of nonheme iron intake were 5.00 (1.08-23.26), 3.18 (1.41-10.12), and 3.25 (1.39-7.59), respectively, for cerebrovascular and 2.48 (1.17-5.25), 2.25 (1.03-4.80), and 2.51 (1.39-4.53), respectively, for coronary events. Heme iron intake was not a predictor. CONCLUSIONS Based on a longitudinal population analysis, low iron intake seems to be an independent predictor of cerebrovascular and coronary morbidity and mortality in women.


Obesity | 2015

Body fat and the cognitive pattern: A population-based study

Valérie Tikhonoff; Edoardo Casiglia; Federica Guidotti; Nunzia Giordano; Bortolo Martini; Alberto Mazza; Paolo Spinella; Paolo Palatini

The relationship between body fatness and cognitive pattern at a population level was investigated.


American Journal of Hypertension | 2012

The C825T GNB3 polymorphism, independent of blood pressure, predicts cerebrovascular risk at a population level

Edoardo Casiglia; Valérie Tikhonoff; Giovanni Boschetti; Anna Bascelli; Mario Saugo; Giuseppe Guglielmi; Sandro Caffi; Giulio Rigoni; Nunzia Giordano; Carla Grasselli; Bortolo Martini; Alberto Mazza; Fabia De Lazzari; Paolo Palatini

BACKGROUND The role of C825T polymorphism of the candidate GNB3 gene in predicting cerebrovascular outcome has been poorly explored in longitudinal setting at a population level. METHODS In an epidemiological setting, 1,678 men and women from general population were genotyped for C825T polymorphism of GNB3 gene and follow-up for 10 years to detect nonfatal and fatal cerebrovascular events (CE). Established cerebrovascular risk factors were used to adjust the multivariate Cox analysis for confounders. RESULTS Seventy-three nonfatal and 30 fatal CE were recorded. Incidence of CE was higher in TT than in C-carriers (fatal: 2.6 vs. 1.7%, P < 0.03; nonfatal: 7.8 vs. 3.9%, P < 0.03; fatal recurrences: 1.6 vs. 0.6%, P < 0.03). In Cox analysis, the TT genotype predicted nonfatal (hazard ratio 1.99, 95% confidence interval 1.05-3.79, P = 0.03), fatal (2.91, 1.05-8.12, P = 0.04), and fatal recurrent CE (6.82, 1.50-31.1, P = 0.02) also after adjustment for age, gender, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, body adiposity, atherogenetic blood lipids, serum uric acid, diabetes, calories, caffeine and ethanol intake, and coronary events at baseline. Further adjustment for historical CE made the association between TT genotype and incident fatal CE nonsignificant (hazard ratio 2.72, 95% confidence interval 0.96-7.22, P = 0.06). CONCLUSIONS The TT genotype of GNB3 gene predicts incident CE independent of blood pressure and other established risk factors at a population level. Further studies are needed to clarify the nature and pathways of this association.


Journal of Womens Health | 2013

Arterial stiffness and related variables across menopausal status: an epidemiologic study.

Edoardo Casiglia; Valérie Tikhonoff; Giovanni Boschetti; Nunzia Giordano; Alberto Mazza; Sandro Caffi; Paolo Palatini

OBJECTIVES To determine if postmenopausal women have different arterial stiffness, blood pressure (BP) values, or metabolic patterns in comparison to fertile women and to men at a population level. METHODS This is a population-based epidemiologic study of 1853 representative men and women aged 18-95 years. Clinostatic humeral BP was measured using Omron 705CP. Aortic BP, augmentation index (AI), and pulse wave velocity (PWV) were determined using applanation tonometry. Body mass index (BMI) and subscapular skinfold thickness were used as measures of adiposity. Fasting and postload blood glucose, homeostasis model assessment (HOMA), low-density and high-density lipoprotein serum cholesterol (LDL-C and HDL-C) and triglycerides were assessed. RESULTS Age was higher in postmenopausal women than in fertile women (68.8 ± 9.5 vs. 35.7 ± 10.2 years, p<0.001), and BMI was 16% higher (p<0.01) in the postmenopausal women after age adjustment. Humeral and aortic BP, carotid and radial AI, carotid-femoral PWV, BMI, LDL-C, LDL-C/HDL ratio, triglycerides, glucose tolerance, HOMA, and skinfold thickness were apparently higher in postmenopausal than in fertile women. Using multivariate analysis, however, all these differences were abolished after adjusting for confounders (age and, when appropriate, BMI), except for LDL-C, which remained 19% higher (p<0.01) in postmenopausal women than in fertile women after adjusting for many confounders (age, BMI, cholesterol, ethanol intake, caloric intake, and triiodothyronine). CONCLUSIONS Only LDL-C increases in postmenopausal women, whereas other differences attributed to menopause, including BP and arterial stiffness, seem to be confounding effects of age and BMI.


International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis | 2012

Relaxation Versus Fractionation as Hypnotic Deepening: Do They Differ in Physiological Changes?

Edoardo Casiglia; Valérie Tikhonoff; Nunzia Giordano; Giuseppe Regaldo; Enrico Facco; Piergiorgio Marchetti; Sami Schiff; Tosello Mt; Margherita Giacomello; Augusto M. Rossi; Fabia De Lazzari; Paolo Palatini; Piero Amodio

Abstract After rapid hypnotic induction, 12 healthy volunteers underwent hypnotic deepening with relaxation or with fractionation (without relaxation) in a random latin-square protocol. Electroencephalographic occipital alpha activity was measured, low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography was performed, and hemodynamics (stroke volume, heart rate, cardiac output, mean arterial blood pressure, forearm arterial flow and resistance) were monitored in basal conditions and after deepening. After relaxation, both forearm flow (−18%) and blood pressure (−4%) decreased; forearm resistance remained unchanged. After fractionation, a forearm flow decrease comparable to that recorded after relaxation was observed, but blood pressure remained unchanged, leading to an increase of forearm resistance (+51%). Central hemodynamics did not change. Alpha activity increased in the precuneus after fractionation only. In conclusion, both relaxation and fractionation have vasoconstrictor effects, but fractionation is also associated with an increase in peripheral resistance.


Clinical Nutrition | 2013

High dietary fiber intake prevents stroke at a population level

Edoardo Casiglia; Valérie Tikhonoff; Sandro Caffi; Giovanni Boschetti; Carla Grasselli; Mario Saugo; Nunzia Giordano; Valentina Rapisarda; Paolo Spinella; Paolo Palatini


International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis | 2012

Measured outcomes with hypnosis as an experimental tool in a cardiovascular physiology laboratory.

Edoardo Casiglia; Tikhonoff; Nunzia Giordano; Andreatta E; Regaldo G; Tosello Mt; Augusto M. Rossi; Bordin D; Margherita Giacomello; Enrico Facco

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