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Dive into the research topics where Renata Conforti is active.

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Featured researches published by Renata Conforti.


Cephalalgia | 2012

Executive resting-state network connectivity in migraine without aura.

Antonio Russo; Alessandro Tessitore; Alfonso Giordano; Daniele Corbo; Laura Marcuccio; Manuela De Stefano; Fabrizio Salemi; Renata Conforti; Fabrizio Esposito; Gioacchino Tedeschi

Background: Converging neuropsychological evidence suggests that in migraine executive functions (EF) may be affected during interictal periods. Objective: To evaluate the functional connectivity of the fronto-parietal networks (FPN) known to be associated with EF, in migraine without aura (MwoA) patients, in the interictal period, in comparison to healthy controls (HC). Methods: Using resting-state functional MRI (RS-fMRI), we compared functional connectivity within the FPN in 14 patients with MwoA versus 14 sex- and age-matched HC, and assessed the correlation between functional connectivity within FPN, clinical features of MwoA patients, and EF. We used voxel-based morphometry to assess whether between-group differences in functional connectivity were dependent on structural differences. Results: Neuropsychological data revealed no significant executive dysfunction in MwoA patients. RS-fMRI showed that MwoA patients, compared to HC, had significant functional connectivity reduction within the right FPN and specifically in the middle frontal gyrus (MFG) and the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex. In addition, we found that MFG reduced connectivity was negatively correlated with the pain intensity of migraine attacks. There were no structural differences between the two groups. Conclusions: Our data suggest that, even in the absence of clinically evident EF deficits, MwoA is associated with reduced FPN functional connectivity. This study provides further insights into the complex scenario of migraine mechanisms.


Journal of Neurology | 2012

Pain processing in patients with migraine: an event-related fMRI study during trigeminal nociceptive stimulation

Antonio Russo; Alessandro Tessitore; Fabrizio Esposito; Laura Marcuccio; Alfonso Giordano; Renata Conforti; Andrea Truini; Antonella Paccone; Florindo d’Onofrio; Gioacchino Tedeschi

We explored the functional pattern of the pain-processing network in patients with migraine, in the interictal periods, during trigeminal noxious stimulation. Contact heat evoked potential stimulation induced thermal pain and functional magnetic resonance imaging were used to measure whole-brain activation in 16 patients with episodic migraine without aura and 16 age- and gender-matched healthy controls in response to a severe (53°C) noxious, a moderate (51°C) noxious, and a control (41°C) stimulus applied to the maxillary skin. When comparing the fMRI activation over the entire brain, patients with migraine, with respect to healthy controls, showed a significantly greater activation in the perigenual part of anterior cingulate cortex at 51°C and less activation in the bilateral secondary somatosensory cortex at 53°C. A group-by-stimulus interaction analysis revealed a region in the pons showing a divergent response in patients and healthy controls. Correlation analyses demonstrated that the pons activation correlated with higher headache-related disability in patients. Our findings demonstrate increased antinociceptive activity in patients with migraine, which may represent a compensatory reorganization to modulate pain perception at the same intensity of healthy controls.


American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2012

Widespread Microstructural White Matter Involvement in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis: A Whole-Brain DTI Study

Mario Cirillo; Fabrizio Esposito; Gioacchino Tedeschi; Giuseppina Caiazzo; Anna Sagnelli; Giovanni Piccirillo; Renata Conforti; Fabio Tortora; M. R. Monsurrò; S. Cirillo; Francesca Trojsi

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The extensive application of advanced MR imaging techniques to the study of ALS has undoubtedly improved our knowledge of disease pathophysiology, even if the actual spread of the neurodegenerative process throughout the central nervous system is not fully understood. The present study aimed to detect WM patterns of microstructural abnormalities to better investigate the pathologic process in ALS, within but also beyond CSTs, in a whole-brain analysis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: DTI was performed in 19 patients with ALS and 20 matched healthy controls, by using whole-brain TBSS and VOI analyses. RESULTS: We observed a significant decrease of FA in the body of CC of the ALS group (P < .05). At the VOI level, both FA decrease and RD increase in the body of CC significantly correlated with the UMN score (P = .003 and P = .02). Additionally, significant voxelwise positive correlations between FA and the ALSFRS-R were detected in the WM tracts underneath the left premotor cortex (P < .05). CONCLUSIONS: The correlations between reduction of FA and increase of RD in the body of CC with the UMN score indicate that the WM degeneration in the CC is strictly related to the ALS pyramidal impairment, while the correlation between FA and ALSFRS-R in the associative tracts underneath the left premotor cortex might reflect the progressive spread of the disease from the motor toward the extramotor areas.


Cephalalgia | 2016

Increased interictal visual network connectivity in patients with migraine with aura

Gioacchino Tedeschi; Antonio Russo; Francesca Conte; Daniele Corbo; Giuseppina Caiazzo; Alfonso Giordano; Renata Conforti; Fabrizio Esposito; Alessandro Tessitore

Objective To evaluate the resting-state visual network functional connectivity in patients with migraine with aura and migraine without aura during the interictal period. Population and methods Using resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging, the resting-state visual network integrity was investigated in 20 patients with migraine with aura, 20 age- and sex-matched patients with migraine without aura and 20 healthy controls. Voxel-based morphometry and diffusion tensor imaging were used to assess whether between-groups differences in functional connectivity were dependent on structural or microstructural changes. Results Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging data showed that patients with migraine with aura, compared to both patients with migraine without aura and healthy controls, had a significant increased functional connectivity in the right lingual gyrus within the resting-state visual network (p < 0.05, cluster-level corrected). This abnormal resting-state visual network functional connectivity was observed in the absence of structural or microstructural abnormalities and was not related to migraine severity. Conclusions Our imaging data revealed that patients with migraine with aura exhibit an altered resting-state visual network connectivity. These results support the hypothesis of an extrastriate cortex involvement, centred in the lingual gyrus, a brain region related to mechanisms underlying the initiation and propagation of the migraine aura. This resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging finding may represent a functional biomarker that could differentiate patients experiencing the aura phenomenon from patients with migraine without aura, even between migraine attacks.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2007

A rare symptomatic presentation of ecchordosis physaliphora: neuroradiological and surgical management

Michele Rotondo; Massimo Natale; Giuseppe Mirone; Mario Cirillo; Renata Conforti; Assunta Scuotto

We report a case of ecchordosis physaliphora, an uncommon benign lesion originating from embryonic notochordal remnants, intradurally located in the prepontine cistern, that unusually presented associated with symptoms. MRI detected and precisely located the small mass. At surgery, a cystic gelatinous nodule was found ventral to the pons, contiguous with the dorsal wall of the clivus via a small pedicle. Histological examination diagnosed the lesion as an ecchordosis physaliphora. Here we focus on the analysis of the neuroradiological aspects that play a crucial role from both a diagnostic and a therapeutic standpoint.


Neurological Sciences | 2008

Infratentorial progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy in a patient treated with fludarabine and rituximab

Simona Bonavita; Renata Conforti; Antonio Dello Russo; Rosaria Sacco; Alessandro Tessitore; Antonio Gallo; Marida Della Corte; Maria Rosaria Monsurrò; Gioacchino Tedeschi

Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) is a rare demyelinating disease of the central nervous system caused by the JC papovavirus, and is a well known complication in patients with lymphoproliferative diseases (LPDs) during chemotherapy. We report the case of a 59-year-old woman affected by B-cell LPD who underwent three cycles of chemotherapy with fludarabine and rituximab and developed atypical PML six months after the last cycle of chemotherapy. Our patient showed the following peculiarities: chemotherapy regimen was neither heavy nor prolonged; the onset of neurological symptoms was unexpectedly late; the MRI lesion was atypical for non-HIV-related PML, being monofocal and infratentorial with early gadolinium (Gd) enhancement and mass effect; survival was rather prolonged despite the lack of treatment. These data suggest that in patients with LPDs, the occurrence of progressive neurological deficits should induce the suspicion of PML even when clinical onset is late (with respect to chemotherapy) and in the presence of a single infratentorial lesion, with Gd enhancement and mass effect.


Acta Neurochirurgica | 2010

Post-traumatic peripheral facial nerve palsy: surgical and neuroradiological consideration in five cases of delayed onset

Michele Rotondo; Raffaele D’Avanzo; Massimo Natale; Renata Conforti; Michela Pascale; Assunta Scuotto

The facial nerve is frequently injured after head trauma with or without temporal bone fractures. Computed tomography (CT) is the best procedure for detecting the fracture line at the level of the facial nerve canal and for assessing any associated lesions within the temporal bone. Magnetic resonance (MR) is required if there is a facial nerve paralysis, unexplained by CT findings. We present five cases of delayed post-traumatic facial nerve palsy without evidence of temporal bone fractures on CT, thus studied on MR. MR was essential for diagnosing the nerve impairment. Neuroradiological findings, clinical presentation, and electrodiagnostic tests influenced the management of the patients.


Rivista Di Neuroradiologia | 2016

Brain MRI abnormalities in the adult form of myotonic dystrophy type 1: A longitudinal case series study:

Renata Conforti; Mario de Cristofaro; Adriana Cristofano; Barbara Brogna; Angela Sardaro; Gioacchino Tedeschi; S. Cirillo; Alfonso Di Costanzo

This study aimed to verify whether brain abnormalities, previously described in patients with myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), progressed over time and, if so, to characterize their progression. Thirteen DM1 patients, who had at least two MRI examinations, were retrospectively evaluated and included in the study. The mean duration (± standard deviation) of follow-up was 13.4 (±3.8) years, over a range of 7–20 years. White matter lesions (WMLs) were rated by semi-quantitative method, the signal intensity of white matter poster-superior to trigones (WMPST) by reference to standard images and brain atrophy by ventricular/brain ratio (VBR). At the end of MRI follow-up, the scores relative to lobar, temporal and periventricular WMLs, to WMPST signal intensity and to VBR were significantly increased compared to baseline, and MRI changes were more evident in some families than in others. No correlation was found between the MRI changes and age, onset, disease duration, muscular involvement, CTG repetition and follow-up duration. These results demonstrated that white matter involvement and brain atrophy were progressive in DM1 and suggested that progression rate varied from patient to patient, regardless of age, disease duration and genetic defect.


Recenti progressi in medicina | 2013

The value of the MRI in defining the morfology of cerebral aging

Renata Conforti; Raffaella Capasso; Simona Bonavita; Teresa Califano; Antonio Russo; Melchiore Giganti; Alessandro Tessitore

: White matter changes are one of the several aging brain alterations. Actually, magnetic resonance imaging is the best diagnostic tool in investigation and monitoring these lesions that determine some common clinical manifestations in the elderly population.


Rivista Di Neuroradiologia | 2012

Giant dilatations of virchow-robin spaces in the midbrain. MRI aspects and review of the literature.

Oktay Algin; Renata Conforti; P.P. Saturnino; Evrim Ozmen; Mario Cirillo; A. Di Costanzo; M. De Cristofaro; Michele Rotondo; S. Cirillo

Virchow-Robin spaces are lesions often seen in the brain parenchyma but their etiopathogenesis remains unsettled. Giant Virchow-Robin spaces placed in the midbrain are extremely rare. We describe three patients with a diagnosis of giant Virchow-Robin spaces in the midbrain, and their clinical and radiologic findings. We reviewed the literature in terms of the etiopathology, anatomic and radiologic appearance and differential diagnosis of the giant Virchow-Robin spaces. The diagnostic role of the high Tesla magnetic resonance devices and new sequences techniques such as three dimensional isotropic acquisition and diffusion tensor imaging were also evaluated in this case series.

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S. Cirillo

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Gioacchino Tedeschi

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Mario Cirillo

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Alessandro Tessitore

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Assunta Scuotto

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Alberto Negro

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Giuseppina Caiazzo

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Angela Sardaro

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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