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Featured researches published by P. Cortelli.


Neurology | 1997

REM sleep behavior disorders in multiple system atrophy

Giuseppe Plazzi; R. Corsini; Federica Provini; Giulia Pierangeli; Paolo Martinelli; Pasquale Montagna; Elio Lugaresi; P. Cortelli

We report the results of clinical and polysomnographic investigations on 39 consecutive multiple system atrophy (MSA) patients. Twenty-seven patients (69%) reported nocturnal motor paroxysmal episodes related to dreams, suggesting the clinical diagnosis of REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD). In 12 of them (44%), RBD preceded the clinical onset of the disease by more than 1 year. In seven (26%), the RBD onset was concomitant with and in eight (30%) was at least 2 years after the appearance of motor or autonomic symptoms. On polysomnographic recordings, 35 of 39 MSA patients (90%) had RBD. Other polysomnographic findings included nonclinical obstructive sleep apnea in 6 patients, laryngeal stridor in 8 patients, and periodic limb movements during sleep in 10 patients. Our data show that RBD represents the most common clinical sleep manifestation and polysomnographic finding in patients with MSA. RBD can frequently herald the appearance of other MSA symptoms by years. Extended polysomnographic montages are recommended in MSA sleep studies.


Neurology | 1992

Abnormal brain and muscle energy metabolism shown by 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy in patients affected by migraine with aura

Bruno Barbiroli; Pasquale Montagna; P. Cortelli; R. Funicello; S. Iotti; L. Monari; Giulia Pierangeli; P. Zaniol; Elio Lugaresi

We studied brain and muscle energy metabolism by phosphorus 31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy (31P-MRS) in 12 patients affected by migraine with aura (classic migraine) in interictal periods. Brain 31P-MRS disclosed a low phosphocreatine content in all patients, accompanied by high adenosine diphosphate concentration, a high percentage of V/Vmax (adenosine triphosphate), and a low phosphorylation potential—features showing an unstable state of metabolism in classic migraine. Abnormal muscle mitochondrial function, in the absence of clinical signs of muscle impairment, was present in nine of the 12 patients examined.


Neurology | 1994

31P-magnetic resonance spectroscopy in migraine without aura

Pasquale Montagna; P. Cortelli; L. Monari; Giulia Pierangeli; Piero Parchi; Raffaele Lodi; S. Iotti; Chiara Frassineti; P. Zaniol; Elio Lugaresi; Bruno Barbiroli

We investigated 22 patients with migraine without aura, all drug-free and in headache-free periods, by means of 31P-magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) of brain and muscle. Brain 31P-MRS showed significantly low phosphocreatine, increased adenosine diphosphate, and decreased phosphorylation potential. There was a slow rate of phosphocreatine recovery after exercise in the muscle of 12 of 22 patients. Energy metabolism is abnormal in migraine without aura, as previously demonstrated in patients with migraine stroke and migraine with aura.


Clinical Autonomic Research | 1994

Cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction in normotensive awake subjects with obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome

P. Cortelli; Piero Parchi; E. Sforza; Manuela Contin; Giulia Pierangeli; Giorgio Barletta; Elio Lugaresi

Cardiovascular autonomic function in normotensive awake patients with obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome was studied in 21 normotensive (mean age 48 ± 14 years), drug-free men with obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome. Cardiovascular reflex tests with continuous blood pressure monitoring and biochemical indices were performed the morning after a standard polygraphic sleep recording. A group of 20 agematched (mean age 49 ± 19 years) normal subjects was used as controls. The obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome patients showed higher heart rate and noradrenaline plasma levels (p < 0.05) at rest and a higher blood pressure response to head-up tilt (p < 0.01), suggesting sympathetic overactivity. Respiratory arrhythmia, baroreflex sensitivity index and Valsalva ratio were significantly lower in the obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome group (p < 0.01) whereas the decrease in heart rate induced by the cold face test was significantly higher (p < 0.05) showing a blunting of reflexes dependent on baroreceptor or pulmonary afferents with normal or increased cardiac vagal efferent activity. These abnormalities in autonomic regulation may predispose obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome patients to cardiovascular complications like hypertension and cardiac arrhythmias.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 1997

Clinical and brain bioenergetics improvement with idebenone in a patient with Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy: a clinical and 31P-MRS study

P. Cortelli; Pasquale Montagna; Giulia Pierangeli; Raffaele Lodi; Piero Barboni; Rocco Liguori; Valerio Carelli; S. Iotti; P. Zaniol; Elio Lugaresi; Bruno Barbiroli

We used phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy (31P-MRS) to study in vivo brain and muscle bioenergetics in a male patient with Lebers hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) and mtDNA mutation at 11,778 bp who developed spastic paraparesis with white matter lesions on brain MR imaging. The study was performed before and during treatment with idebenone (135 mg t.i.d.) and after withdrawal. Clinical amelioration and worsening were associated with parallel changes in brain and skeletal muscle bioenergetics following the administration or withdrawal of idebenone. Reversal of paraparesis by idebenone was paralleled by normalization of 31P-MRS, serum lactate and central motor conduction. Extra-ocular neurological dysfunction in LHON may be amenable to treatment by appropriate quinones.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1998

REM sleep behaviour disorder differentiates pure autonomic failure from multiple system atrophy with autonomic failure

Giuseppe Plazzi; P. Cortelli; Pasquale Montagna; Alessandro De Monte; Raffaella Corsini; Manuela Contin; Federica Provini; Giulia Pierangeli; Elio Lugaresi

Ten patients with primary autonomic failure, followed up in a prospective clinical and laboratory study, were finally diagnosed as pure autonomic failure or multiple system atrophy with autonomic failure. Polysomnographic studies were performed in all patients. Whereas all four patients with multiple system atrophy complained of sleep related episodes suggesting REM sleep behaviour disorder (RBD) confirmed by polysomnography, RBD remained absent in the remaining six patients with pure autonomic failure. The data indicate that RBD is an important clinical feature, often heralding multiple system atrophy, but which is absent throughout the course of pure autonomic failure; its recognition can thus be useful in the prognostic evaluation of early primary autonomic failure syndromes.


Cephalalgia | 1994

Abnormal platelet mitochondrial function in patients affected by migraine with and without aura

Simonetta Sangiorgi; Mirella Mochi; Roberto Riva; P. Cortelli; L. Monari; Giulia Pierangeli; Pasquale Montagna

To investigate energy metabolism in migraine, we determined platelet mitochondrial enzyme activities in 40 patients with migraine with aura and in 40 patients with migraine without aura during attack-free intervals and in 24 healthy control subjects. NADH-dehydrogenase, citrate synthase and cytochrome-c-oxidase activities in both patient groups were significantly lower than in controls (p < 0.01), while NADH-cytochrome-c-reductase activity was reduced only in migraine with aura (p < 0.01). No alteration in succinate-dehydrogenase was observed. Monoamine-oxidase activity differed between sexes (p < 0.05) but within each sex group no difference was observed between patients and controls. We hypothesize that the defect in mitochondrial enzymes observed indicates a systemic impairment of mitochondrial function in migraine patients.


Brain Research Bulletin | 2001

Deficient energy metabolism is associated with low free magnesium in the brains of patients with migraine and cluster headache

Raffaele Lodi; S. Iotti; P. Cortelli; Giulia Pierangeli; Sabina Cevoli; Valeria Clementi; S. Soriani; Pasquale Montagna; Bruno Barbiroli

We used phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy to assess in vivo the brain cytosolic free magnesium concentration and the free energy released by the reaction of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) hydrolysis (DeltaG(ATPhyd)), the latter being an index of the cells bioenergetics condition. We studied 78 patients with migraine in attack-free periods (7 with migraine stroke, 13 with migraine with prolonged aura, 37 with migraine with typical aura or basilar migraine, and 21 with migraine without aura), and 13 patients with cluster headache. In the occipital lobes of all subgroups of migraine and in cluster headache patients cytosolic free [Mg(2+)] as well as the free energy released by the reaction of ATP hydrolysis were significantly reduced. Among migraine patients, the level of free energy released by the reaction of ATP hydrolysis and the cytosolic free [Mg(2+)] showed a trend in keeping with the severity of clinical phenotype, both showing the lowest values in patients with migraine stroke and the highest in patients with migraine without aura. These results support our current hypothesis that the reduction in free [Mg(2+)] in tissues with mitochondrial dysfunction is secondary to the bioenergetics deficit, and are against a primary role of low brain cytosolic free [Mg(2+)] in causing the bioenergetics deficit in headache.


Cephalalgia | 1993

Testing Models for Genetic Determination in Migraine

Mirella Mochi; Simonetta Sangiorgi; P. Cortelli; Valerio Carelli; C Scapoli; M Crisci; L. Monari; Giulia Pierangeli; Pasquale Montagna

We collected two clinically matched samples of patients, one sample affected by migraine with aura the other by migraine without aura, to investigate the genetic determination of these conditions. A maternal and X-linked transmission for both these diseases was considered unlikely after pedigree analysis. Classical segregation analysis indicated a likely autosomal recessive kind of transmission for both. Reduced penetrance and the h2 values, however, imply the presence of additional genetic and/or environmental factors controlling the phenotypic expression of migraine.


Neurological Sciences | 2003

A genetic association study of migraine with dopamine receptor 4, dopamine transporter and dopamine-beta-hydroxylase genes

Mirella Mochi; Sabina Cevoli; P. Cortelli; Giulia Pierangeli; S. Soriani; Chiara Scapoli; Pasquale Montagna

Abstract. We assessed the role of some dopamine metabolism genes in the genetic susceptibility to migraine. We performed an association study using three functional polymorphisms: a 48-base-pair (bp) tandem repeat in the D4 dopamine receptor gene (DRD4), a 40-bp tandem repeat in the dopamine transporter gene (DAT) and a dinucleotide repeat in the dopamine beta-hydroxylase (DBH) gene. Allelic and genotypic frequencies for each polymorphism were assayed in two migraine populations (93 individuals with migraine with aura (MA) and 101 with migraine without aura (MO)) and were compared with those in a control group (117 individuals). No significant differences were found between control and migraine groups for DAT and DBH polymorphisms. Instead, the distribution of alleles for the DRD4 gene in the MO group was significantly different from those in both MA and control groups, with the shortest and longest alleles being less frequent in MO. Our data indicate that MO, but not MA, shows significant genetic association with DRD4.

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L. Monari

University of Bologna

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P. Zaniol

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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