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Featured researches published by P Maritato.


Brain Research Bulletin | 2007

Mismatch negativity analysis in drug-resistant epileptic patients implanted with vagus nerve stimulator

D Borghetti; Chiara Pizzanelli; P Maritato; M Fabbrini; S Jensen; Alfonso Iudice; Luigi Murri; Ferdinando Sartucci

It is well known that some epileptic patients does not respond to conventional treatments, despite multiple combination of antiepileptic drugs, and they are therefore considered drug-resistant. For these patients, vagal nerve stimulation (VNS) represents a successful alternative to traditional therapy, and it is generally well tolerated; beside benefits on seizure frequency, VNS showed positive effects on cognition and mood. Aim of this study was to investigate short-term memory changes in a group of 12 patients implanted with VNS, through Mismatch Negativity wave (MMN). After 1 year of follow-up, MMN latencies and amplitudes did not show significant changes following VNS implantation, independently on current intensity, as compared with pre-implantation values. In two patients, MMN values, which were abnormal before VNS implantation, showed a major reduction in latency and an increase in amplitude after implantation, suggesting a likely positive effect of VNS on pre-attentive processes investigated by MMN.


International Journal of Neuroscience | 2007

Motor unit number estimation (mune) as a quantitative measure of disease progression and motor unit reorganization in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

Ferdinando Sartucci; P Maritato; Gianluca Moscato; Giovanni Orlandi; R Calabrese; Gl Domenici; L. Murri

Motor Unit Number Estimation (MUNE), a technique allowing to estimate the number of functioning Motor Units (MU) in single muscles, was used to score the diseases severity and progression rate in a group of 58 patients with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS). All patients underwent MUNE in the abductor digiti minimi (ADM) muscle during the diagnostic work-up (T0), after three (T1) and six (T2) months. A significant loss [p < .001] of MU and a decrease [p < .001] of the maximal M wave area at T0 was found, whereas mean step area was increased [p < .001]. During the follow-up (T1 and T2), MU loss continued, maximal M wave decreased, and mean step area increased significantly. The results confirm that MUNE is a suitable tool to quantify the pathological changes in MU in patients with ALS.


Magnetic Resonance Materials in Physics Biology and Medicine | 2011

Reproducibility of BOLD localization of interictal activity in patients with focal epilepsy: intrasession and intersession comparisons.

Ilaria Pesaresi; Mirco Cosottini; Gina Belmonte; P Maritato; Mario Mascalchi; Michele Puglioli; Ferdinando Sartucci; Carlo Bartolozzi; Luigi Murri

ObjectSimultaneous EEG-fMRI recordings allow the identification of haemodynamic changes induced by neuronal activity during ictal or interictal epileptiform events (IEDs). We evaluated the reproducibility of continuous EEG-fMRI (cEEG-fMRI) in patients with focal epilepsy.Materials and methodsWe studied 15 patients with focal epilepsy (8 cryptogenic and 7 symptomatic) and frequent interictal abnormalities. Each patient underwent two cEEG-fMRI acquisitions (runs) in the same day (session) and 8 patients repeated the examination after one month. cEEG-fMRI reproducibility was defined by the existence of partially overlapping clusters between activation maps obtained from different runs.ResultsWe detected IEDs in 40 out of 46 EEG-fMRI runs and a related significant BOLD-response in all 40 runs. A prevalent positive BOLD response was detected in 12 patients and a prevalent negative response in 3 subjects. Statistical maps included a mean of 10 significant clusters. Nearly 30% of clusters were reproducible in both intrasession and intersession comparisons, with a mean overlap of 30%. Reproducibility did not differ between positive and negative BOLD-responses.DiscussionAmong the reproducible clusters, those with the highest percentage of overlap were concordant with the EEG electric field in all patients and they were localized in the same lobe as the brain lesion in patients with symptomatic epilepsy. We hypothesize that reproducible clusters could be more consistently related to the irritative zone than non-reproducible ones.ConclusionThe evaluation of cluster reproducibility could improve our knowledge of IED-related BOLD response. Moreover, it could enhance the reliability of cEEG-fMRI to identify the irritative zone in focal epileptic patients.


International Journal of Neuroscience | 2003

ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL EVALUATION OF GENITO-SPHINCTERIC DYSFUNCTION IN MULTIPLE SYSTEM ATROPHY

A Pellegrinetti; Gianluca Moscato; Gabriele Siciliano; Ubaldo Bonuccelli; Giovanni Orlandi; P Maritato; Ferdinando Sartucci

Thirteen patients with multiple system atrophy underwent multimodality neurophysiological evaluation, including sphincteric needle electromyography (EMG), sacral reflexes, pudendal nerve terminal latency, pudendal (PSEPs) and tibialis posterior nerve somatosensory evoked potentials (TPSEPs), and perineal motor evoked potentials (PMEPs). EMG revealed denervation or neurogenic changes, with reduction in spontaneous tonic activity at rest and abnormal pudendal nerve terminal latency in 10 patients (76.9%); anal reflex was delayed in 7 patients (53.8%). TPSEPs scalp responses were clearly abnormal in 4 patients (30.7%), whereas PSEPs exhibited changes in 9 (69.2%): in 6 patients responses were delayed at lumbar level (46.2%), and in 5 over the scalp (38.4%). PMEPs showed an increase in latency with a mild prolongation of central motor conduction time (CMCT) in 2 cases (15.3%); 1 patient had prolonged latencies following both cortical and sacral stimulation, but a normal CMCT. Even if diagnostic yield is not improved using these investigations they provide evidence of multiple lesion sites other than Onufs nucleus.


Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2010

EEG topography-specific BOLD changes: a continuous EEG-fMRI study in a patient with focal epilepsy

Mirco Cosottini; Ilaria Pesaresi; P Maritato; Gina Belmonte; Arianna Taddei; Ferdinando Sartucci; Mario Mascalchi; Luigi Murri

Blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) response related to interictal activity was evaluated in a patient with post-traumatic focal epilepsy at repeated continuous electroencephalogram (EEG)-functional magnetic resonance imaging examinations. Lateralized interictal EEG activity induced a main cluster of activation co-localized with the anatomical lesion. Spreading of EEG interictal activity to both frontal lobes evoked bilateral clusters of activation indicating that topography of BOLD response might depend on the spatial distribution of epileptiform activity.


Rivista Di Neuroradiologia | 2008

Reproducibility of BOLD response related to interictal EEG activity in patients with focal epilepsy

Mirco Cosottini; Ilaria Pesaresi; P Maritato; Gina Belmonte; Ferdinando Sartucci; Mario Mascalchi; L. Murri


Rivista Di Neuroradiologia | 2008

Investigation of pain-intensity coding brain regions: a single-event f-MRI study

Mirco Cosottini; Ilaria Pesaresi; Gina Belmonte; Maluccio; P Maritato; Daniela Frosini; Mario Mascalchi; Ferdinando Sartucci


Neurological Sciences | 2008

Interictal EEG-fMRI in patients with focal epilepsy: interictal EEG activity changes influence reproducibility of BOLD-response

Ferdinando Sartucci; Mirco Cosottini; Ilaria Pesaresi; P Maritato; Gina Belmonte; A Taddei; Enrica Bonanni; Mario Mascalchi; L. Murri


Epilepsia | 2008

SWALLOWING REFLEX EPILEPSY: COULD ORAL THERAPY REPRESENT A PROBLEM?

P Maritato; Emanuele Bartolini; Mariella Baldini; Daria Perini; S Jensen; Cristina Frittelli; Enrica Bonanni; Alfonso Iudice


European Journal of Neurology | 2007

Clinical and demographicfeatures of multiple sclerosis in an Italian register: a cross-sectional ecologicstudy

Chiara Pecori; Cinzia Lucchesi; V. Pellicia; D. Benvenuti; P. Riani; Cristina Frittelli; P Maritato; Francesco Manfredonia; Livia Pasquali; Giuseppe Meucci; Alfonso Iudice; Luigi Murri

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