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Dive into the research topics where Patrizia Avoni is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrizia Avoni.


Brain | 2011

Idebenone Treatment In Leber's Hereditary Optic Neuropathy

Valerio Carelli; Chiara La Morgia; Maria Lucia Valentino; Giovanni Rizzo; Michele Carbonelli; Anna Maria De Negri; F. Sadun; Arturo Carta; Silvana Guerriero; Francesca Simonelli; Alfredo A. Sadun; Divya Aggarwal; Rocco Liguori; Patrizia Avoni; Agostino Baruzzi; Massimo Zeviani; Pasquale Montagna; Piero Barboni

Sir, We have read with great interest the results presented by Klopstock et al. (2011) concerning the RHODOS study on a clinical trial with idebenone in Lebers hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) and we would like to share our own experience of idebenone therapy in LHON. Idebenone has been an approved drug (Mnesis®, Takeda Italia Farmaceutici) in Italy since the early 1990s and, after the initial report by Mashima et al . (1992) on its possible efficacy in LHON, we offered this therapeutic option to all of our new consecutive patients with LHON, almost all of whom accepted treatment. Idebenone was given after informed consent following the regulation for ‘off-label’ drug administration and was provided for free by the National Health Service, under the legislation for certified rare disorders. Patients were initially treated with 270 mg/day (Cortelli et al ., 1997; Carelli et al ., 1998 a , b ), but following the reports on idebenone treatment in Friedreich ataxia, the dosages were increased to 540–675 mg/day (Rustin et al ., 1999; Kearney et al ., 2009). To evaluate retrospectively the efficacy of idebenone therapy, we reviewed all of our patients with LHON, idebenone treated and untreated, after approval of the institutional Internal Review Board. Inclusion criteria for treated patients were the initiation of therapy within 1 year after visual loss in the second eye, and for all patients (treated and untreated) age at onset of at least 10 years and a follow-up of at least 5 years. We included only patients treated within 1 year after onset because this is the time frame to reach the nadir of the visual loss and the probability of spontaneous recovery of vision is highest in the following 5 years (Nikoskelainen et al ., 1983; Barboni et al ., 2005, 2010; …


Epilepsia | 2003

Autosomal Dominant Lateral Temporal Epilepsy: Clinical Spectrum, New Epitempin Mutations, and Genetic Heterogeneity in Seven European Families

Roberto Michelucci; Juan José Poza; Vito Sofia; Maria Rita de Feo; Simona Binelli; Francesca Bisulli; Evan Scudellaro; Barbara Simionati; Rosanna Zimbello; G. D'Orsi; Daniela Passarelli; Patrizia Avoni; Giuliano Avanzini; Paolo Tinuper; Roberto Biondi; Giorgio Valle; Victor F. Mautner; Ulrich Stephani; C. A. Tassinari; Nicholas K. Moschonas; Reiner Siebert; Adolpho L. Lopez de Munain; Jordi Pérez-Tur; Carlo Nobile

Summary:  Purpose: To describe the clinical and genetic findings of seven additional pedigrees with autosomal dominant lateral temporal epilepsy (ADLTE).


Neurology | 2014

Skin nerve α-synuclein deposits: a biomarker for idiopathic Parkinson disease.

Vincenzo Donadio; Alex Incensi; Valentina Leta; Maria Pia Giannoccaro; Cesa Scaglione; Paolo Martinelli; Sabina Capellari; Patrizia Avoni; Agostino Baruzzi; Rocco Liguori

Objective:To investigate (1) whether phosphorylated &agr;-synuclein deposits in skin nerve fibers might represent a useful biomarker for idiopathic Parkinson disease (IPD), and (2) the underlying pathogenesis of peripheral neuropathy associated with IPD. Methods:Twenty-one well-characterized patients with IPD were studied together with 20 patients with parkinsonisms assumed not to have &agr;-synuclein deposits (PAR; 10 patients fulfilling clinical criteria for vascular parkinsonism, 6 for tauopathies, and 4 with parkin mutations) and 30 controls. Subjects underwent nerve conduction velocities from the leg to evaluate large nerve fibers and skin biopsy from proximal (i.e., cervical) and distal (i.e., thigh and distal leg) sites to study small nerve fibers and deposits of phosphorylated &agr;-synuclein considered the pathologic form of &agr;-synuclein. Results:Patients with IPD showed a small nerve fiber neuropathy prevalent in the leg with preserved large nerve fibers. PAR patients showed normal large and small nerve fibers. Phosphorylated &agr;-synuclein was not found in any skin sample in PAR patients and controls, but it was found in all patients with IPD in the cervical skin site. Abnormal deposits were correlated with leg epidermal denervation. Conclusions:The search for phosphorylated &agr;-synuclein in proximal peripheral nerves is a sensitive biomarker for IPD diagnosis, helping to differentiate IPD from other parkinsonisms. Neuritic inclusions of &agr;-synuclein were correlated with a small-fiber neuropathy, suggesting their direct role in peripheral nerve fiber damage. Classification of evidence:This study provides Class III evidence that the presence of phosphorylated &agr;-synuclein in skin nerve fibers on skin biopsy accurately distinguishes IPD from other forms of parkinsonism.Objective: To investigate (1) whether phosphorylated α-synuclein deposits in skin nerve fibers might represent a useful biomarker for idiopathic Parkinson disease (IPD), and (2) the underlying pathogenesis of peripheral neuropathy associated with IPD. Methods: Twenty-one well-characterized patients with IPD were studied together with 20 patients with parkinsonisms assumed not to have α-synuclein deposits (PAR; 10 patients fulfilling clinical criteria for vascular parkinsonism, 6 for tauopathies, and 4 with parkin mutations) and 30 controls. Subjects underwent nerve conduction velocities from the leg to evaluate large nerve fibers and skin biopsy from proximal (i.e., cervical) and distal (i.e., thigh and distal leg) sites to study small nerve fibers and deposits of phosphorylated α-synuclein considered the pathologic form of α-synuclein. Results: Patients with IPD showed a small nerve fiber neuropathy prevalent in the leg with preserved large nerve fibers. PAR patients showed normal large and small nerve fibers. Phosphorylated α-synuclein was not found in any skin sample in PAR patients and controls, but it was found in all patients with IPD in the cervical skin site. Abnormal deposits were correlated with leg epidermal denervation. Conclusions: The search for phosphorylated α-synuclein in proximal peripheral nerves is a sensitive biomarker for IPD diagnosis, helping to differentiate IPD from other parkinsonisms. Neuritic inclusions of α-synuclein were correlated with a small-fiber neuropathy, suggesting their direct role in peripheral nerve fiber damage. Classification of evidence: This study provides Class III evidence that the presence of phosphorylated α-synuclein in skin nerve fibers on skin biopsy accurately distinguishes IPD from other forms of parkinsonism.


Brain Pathology | 2006

Clinical Features of Fatal Familial Insomnia: Phenotypic Variability in Relation to a Polymorphism at Codon 129 of the Prion Protein Gene

Pasquale Montagna; Pietro Cortelli; Patrizia Avoni; Paolo Tinuper; Giuseppe Plazzi; Roberto Gallassi; Francesco Portaluppi; J. Julien; Claude Vital; Marie Bernadette Delisle; Pierluigi Gambetti; Elio Lugaresi

Fatal Familial Insomnia is a hereditary prion disease characterized by a mutation at codon 178 of the prion protein gene cosegregating with the methionine polymorphism at codon 129 of the mutated allele. It is characterized by disturbances of the wake‐sleep cycle, dysautonomia and somatomotor manifestations (myoclonus, ataxia, dysarthria, spasticity). PET studies disclose severe thalamic and additionally cortical hypometabolism. Neuropathology shows marked neuronal loss and gliosis in the thalamus, especially the medio‐dorsal and anterior‐ventral nuclei, olivary hypertrophy and some spongiosis of the cerebral cortex. Detailed analysis of 14 cases from 5 unrelated families showed that patients ran either a short (9.1+ 1.1 months) or a prolonged (30.8 + 21.3 months) clinical course according to whether they were homozygote met/met or heterozygote met/val at codon 129. Moreover, homozygotes had more prominent oneiric episodes, insomnia and dysautonomia at onset, whereas heterozygotes showed ataxia and dysarthria at onset, earlier sphincter loss and epileptic Grand Mai seizures; they also displayed more extensive cortical involvement on PET and at postmortem examination. Our data suggest that the phenotype expression of Fatal Familial Insomnia is related, at least partly, to the polymorphism at codon 129 of the prion protein‐gene.


Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology | 1995

Sleep-wake cycle abnormalities in fatal familial insomnia. Evidence of the role of the thalamus in sleep regulation

E. Sforza; Pasquale Montagna; Paolo Tinuper; Pietro Cortelli; Patrizia Avoni; Franco Ferrillo; Robert B. Petersen; P. Gambetti; Elio Lugaresi

Alterations in sleep organization were longitudinally studied in 6 new cases of fatal familial insomnia (FFI) by 24 h polygraphic recording. All patients showed an early reduction in sleep spindles and K complexes, and a drastic reduction in total sleep time and disruption of the cyclic sleep organization. Complete abolition of NREM sleep and persistence of only brief residual periods of REM sleep without atonia were features characteristic of the 3 patients with a short (less than 1 year) clinical course, and lacking in the 3 cases with a longer (more than 2 years) disease course. In the latter, sudden transitions from waking to NREM or REM sleep occurred, sometimes recurring periodically. Our findings confirm that impairment of sleep-wake regulation is a consistent distinctive feature of FFI.


Annals of Neurology | 2015

Syndromic parkinsonism and dementia associated with OPA1 missense mutations.

Valerio Carelli; Olimpia Musumeci; Leonardo Caporali; Claudia Zanna; Chiara La Morgia; Valentina Del Dotto; Anna Maria Porcelli; Michela Rugolo; Maria Lucia Valentino; Luisa Iommarini; Alessandra Maresca; Piero Barboni; Michele Carbonelli; Costantino Trombetta; Enza Maria Valente; Simone Patergnani; Carlotta Giorgi; Paolo Pinton; Giovanni Rizzo; Caterina Tonon; Raffaele Lodi; Patrizia Avoni; Rocco Liguori; Agostino Baruzzi; Antonio Toscano; Massimo Zeviani

Mounting evidence links neurodegenerative disorders such as Parkinson disease and Alzheimer disease with mitochondrial dysfunction, and recent emphasis has focused on mitochondrial dynamics and quality control. Mitochondrial dynamics and mtDNA maintenance is another link recently emerged, implicating mutations in the mitochondrial fusion genes OPA1 and MFN2 in the pathogenesis of multisystem syndromes characterized by neurodegeneration and accumulation of mtDNA multiple deletions in postmitotic tissues. Here, we report 2 Italian families affected by dominant chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO) complicated by parkinsonism and dementia.


Neurology | 1996

Fatal familial insomnia Behavioral and cognitive features

Roberto Gallassi; A. Morreale; Pasquale Montagna; Pietro Cortelli; Patrizia Avoni; Rudy J. Castellani; R. Gambetti; Elio Lugaresi

Fatal familial insomnia (FFI) is a familial prion disease linked to a mutation of the prion protein gene.Neuropsychological investigations in seven patients with FFI belonging to two different families showed that the main behavioral and neuropsychological features are (1) early impairment of attention and vigilance, (2) memory deficits, mainly of the working memory, (3) impairment of temporal ordering of events, and (4) a progressive dream-like state with neuropsychological and behavioral features of a confusional state. Neuropathologic examination of six patients showed prominent neuronal loss and gliosis involving the anterior ventral and mediodorsal thalamic nuclei, with additional cerebral cortical involvement in two cases. Clinicopathologic correlations indicate that FFI is associated with a neuropsychological and behavioral syndrome that is distinct from the cortical and subcortical dementias, and Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome. These findings offer insights into the function of the thalamic nuclei and challenge the notion of thalamic dementia. NEUROLOGY 1996;46: 935-939


Clinical Neuropharmacology | 1990

Response to a Standard Oral Levodopa Test in Parkinsonian Patients with and without Motor Fluctuations

Manuela Contin; Roberto Riva; Paolo Martinelli; Gaetano Procaccianti; Pietro Cortelli; Patrizia Avoni; Agostino Baruzzi

The acute dose-response profile of a standard oral levodopa dose was followed, over a maximum 8-h period, in 13 patients with and 10 patients without motor fluctuations using a battery of motor quantitative tests (tapping and walking speed, and multiple choice reaction and movement times). Thirteen age-matched normal controls performed tapping and psychomotor tests, at the same time intervals, over a 4-h period. Tapping test and movement times proved significantly impaired in all patients and were the best indicator of levodopa effect, while walking speed and reaction times were apparently of less value, except in severely affected patients. The duration of the levodopa antiparkinsonian effect differed markedly between the two groups, since fluctuating patients returned to prelevodopa dose values within 4 h (mean +/- SEM: 203 +/- 16 min), while in the stable group motor scores remained significantly higher than baseline values up to at least 7 h postdose. The magnitude of the effect was similar in the two groups, but response was complicated by mild to severe dyskinesias in 9 of 13 fluctuating subjects. The pharmacokinetic parameters of levodopa were almost identical in the two groups. Our data add further weight to the hypothesis that cerebral pharmacokinetic or pharmacodynamic factors are responsible for motor fluctuations. Oral levodopa doses coupled with objective tests of motor performance may prove a practical clinical tool to assess and optimize the relationship between drug dose and therapeutic effect.


Muscle & Nerve | 2014

Small nerve fiber involvement in patients referred for fibromyalgia

Maria Pia Giannoccaro; Vincenzo Donadio; Alex Incensi; Patrizia Avoni; Rocco Liguori

Introduction: Fibromyalgia (FM) is a chronic syndrome characterized by widespread pain often accompanied by other symptoms suggestive of neuropathic pain. We evaluated patients for small fiber neuropathy (SFN) who were referred for fibromyalgia (FM). Methods: We studied 20 consecutive subjects with primary FM. Patients underwent neurological examination, nerve conduction studies, and skin biopsies from distal leg and thigh. Results: Electrodiagnostic studies were normal in all patients. SFN was diagnosed in 6 patients by reduced epidermal nerve fiber density. These patients also showed abnormalities of both adrenergic and cholinergic fibers. Conclusions: A subset of FM subjects have SFN, which may contribute to their sensory and autonomic symptoms. Skin biopsy should be considered in the diagnostic work‐up of FM. Muscle Nerve 49: 757–759, 2014


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2010

Autonomic innervation in multiple system atrophy and pure autonomic failure

Vincenzo Donadio; Pietro Cortelli; Mikael Elam; V. Di Stasi; Pasquale Montagna; B. Holmberg; Maria Pia Giannoccaro; Enrico Bugiardini; Patrizia Avoni; Agostino Baruzzi; Rocco Liguori

Background Pure autonomic failure (PAF) and multiple system atrophy (MSA) are both characterised by chronic dysautonomia although presenting different disability and prognosis. Skin autonomic function evaluation by indirect tests has revealed conflicting results in these disorders. Here, the authors report the first direct analysis of skin sympathetic fibres including structure and function in PAF and MSA to ascertain different underlying autonomic lesion sites which may help differentiate between the two conditions. Methods The authors studied eight patients with probable MSA (mean age 60±5 years) and nine patients fulfilling diagnostic criteria for PAF (64±8 years). They underwent head-up tilt test (HUTT), extensive microneurographic search for muscle and skin sympathetic nerve activities from peroneal nerve and punch skin biopsies from finger, thigh and leg to evaluate cholinergic and adrenergic autonomic dermal annexes innervation graded by a semiquantitative score presenting a high level of reliability. Results MSA and PAF patients presented a comparable neurogenic orthostatic hypotension during HUTT and high failure rate of microneurographic trials to record sympathetic nerve activity, suggesting a similar extent of chronic dysautonomia. In contrast, they presented different skin autonomic innervation in the immunofluorescence analysis. MSA patients showed a generally preserved skin autonomic innervation with a significantly higher score than PAF patients showing a marked postganglionic sympathetic denervation. In MSA patients with a long disease duration, morphological abnormalities and/or a slightly decreased autonomic score could be found in the leg reflecting a mild postganglionic involvement. Conclusion Autonomic innervation study of skin annexes is a reliable method which may help differentiate MSA from PAF.

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