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Dive into the research topics where Roberto D'Alessandro is active.

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Featured researches published by Roberto D'Alessandro.


Stroke | 1995

Fever in Acute Stroke Worsens Prognosis A Prospective Study

Giuseppe Azzimondi; Bassein L; Francesco Nonino; Laila Fiorani; Vignatelli L; Giuseppe Re; Roberto D'Alessandro

Background and Purpose No definitive data are yet available on the effects of body temperature on neurological damage after cerebral ischemia in humans. Experimental animal models have provided much evidence, but to our knowledge, only two studies on the relationship between fever and prognosis of stroke in humans have been published. The aim of our study was to investigate the prognostic role of fever in the first 7 days of hospitalization in a cohort of patients admitted to our hospital for acute stroke. Methods We analyzed the data of 183 patients included in a prospective observational prognostic study. Vital status at 30 days was considered the main outcome and was obtained for all patients. Age, level of consciousness, and glycemia at the time of hospitalization were considered covariates for an exact logistic regression analysis. The maximum temperature recorded during the first 7 days dichotomized as “no or low fever” versus “high fever” was added to the model. Death within 10 days, taken as a secondary outcome suggestive of death from neurological causes, was analyzed with exact permutation tests. Results Of the 183 patients analyzed in this study, 43% had fever during the first 7 days after hospitalization. The mean value of the maximum temperature recorded during the first 7 days in the 78 febrile patients was 38.3°C, and the median was 37.9°C. Onset of fever occurred in only 15% of febrile patients during the first day and in 49% on the second. The prognostic roles of age, level of consciousness, and glycemia were confirmed by exact logistic regression. Degree of consciousness impairment was the strongest prognostic variable, with an odds ratio (OR) of 11.4 (95% confidence interval [CI], 4.4 to 31.6). High fever (maximum temperature recorded during the first 7 days ≥37.9°C) was an independent factor for a worse prognosis, with an OR of 3.4 (95% CI, 1.2 to 9.5). The OR of dying within 10 days versus dying between 11 and 30 days was 4.9 (95% CI, 1.2 to 25.2) in patients with high fever with respect to all other patients. Conclusions Fever in the first 7 days was an independent predictor of poor outcome during the first month after a stroke. No data were available on the underlying causes of fever, but the higher risk of death in the first 10 days, most frequently attributed to neurological mechanisms, suggested that high temperature was an independent component of poor prognosis and not only an epiphenomenon of other complications in the course after a stroke. In agreement with animal studies, we found that patients with higher temperature had a worse stroke outcome.


Epilepsia | 2003

Incidence and Short-term Prognosis of Status Epilepticus in Adults in Bologna, Italy

Luca Vignatelli; Caterina Tonon; Roberto D'Alessandro

Summary:  Purpose: To determine the incidence and the 30‐day case fatality of status epilepticus (SE) in the adult resident population of the city of Bologna, Italy.


Neurological Sciences | 2003

Italian version of the Epworth sleepiness scale: external validity

Luca Vignatelli; Giuseppe Plazzi; A. Barbato; Luigi Ferini-Strambi; R. Manni; F. Pompei; Roberto D'Alessandro

Abstract. We assessed the validity of an Italian language version of the Epworth sleepiness scale (ESS). The translated ESS was compared to the multiple sleep latency test (MSLT), considered the gold standard for the diagnosis of excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS). Within the context of a multicentric national study on narcolepsy (Gruppo Italiano Narcolessia Studio Epidemiologico Nazionale, GINSEN) involving 17 Italian sleep centres, we compared the two diagnostic tests on 91 prospectively recruited subjects with suspected EDS (34 with narcolepsy, 16 with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome, 19 with idiopathic hypersomnia, and 22 with other sleep, neurologic or psychiatric disorders). ESS scores were inversely correlated with mean sleep latency values, as measured with MSLT (rho = −0.31, p<0.01). ESS cut-off scores with best sensitivity and specificity were 12 and 17. For the 5-min MSLT cut-off, sensitivity was 87% and 47% respectively; specificity 39% and 74%. For the 8-min MSLT cut-off, sensitivity was 84% and 49%; specificity 50% and 88%. The Italian version of the ESS is an easy-to-use form useful for preliminary screening of daytime sleepiness level in specialist settings.


Acta Neurologica Scandinavica | 1989

Prevalence of every night snoring and obstructive sleep apnoeas among 30-69-year-old men in Bologna, Italy

Fabio Cirignotta; Roberto D'Alessandro; M. Partinen; M. Zucconi; E. Cristina; R. Gerardi; F. M. Cacciatore; Elio Lugaresi

ABSTRACT— An epidemiological survey of the prevalence of snoring and sleep apnoeas was performed on 3479 30‐69‐year‐old men living in Bologna, north‐east Italy. First a postal questionnaire was sent. It was returned with appropriate answers by 1170. A 20% random sample of those who did not answer were invited by telephone to return the questionnaire. Among these groups 119 (10%) and 19 (5.6%) respectively answered that they always snored. A random sample of 40 every‐night snorers were studied by polysomnography. Based on the frequency of every‐night snoring and the results of polysomnography we estimated that the minimal prevalence of sleep apnoea among 30‐69‐year‐old men was 2.7% considering an apnoea + hypopnoea index of 10 or more pathological. According to the Lugaresi classification we had a 2.5% prevalence of heavy snorers’ disease (HSD) Stage 1 or higher. These figures indicate that obstructive sleep apnoea during sleep is a major public health problem.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1988

Epidemiology of headache in the Republic of San Marino.

Roberto D'Alessandro; Giulia Benassi; P L Lenzi; G Gamberini; T. Sacquegna; P De Carolis; Elio Lugaresi

An epidemiological survey on headache was performed in the Republic of San Marino, which is the smallest independent State in the world, located near the Adriatic Coast, within Italy. Among a random sample of 1500 inhabitants over 7 years of age the frequency of headache, severe headache and migraine in the previous year was 35.3%, 12.2%, 9.3% respectively for men, and 46.2%, 20.6%, 18% for women. The most common factors reported to provoke headache were emotional stress, physical strain, lack of sleep, particular foods or drinks and for women menstruation. Migraine patients differed from people without headache in that they had a higher consumption of coffee, more frequently reported bad sleep, allergic disease and previous appendectomy. Furthermore, migraine patients and severe headache sufferers had a higher diastolic blood pressure than non headache subjects.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1989

Risk factors for the syndrome of ventricular enlargement with gait apraxia (idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus): a case-control study.

M Casmiro; Roberto D'Alessandro; F M Cacciatore; R Daidone; F Calbucci; Elio Lugaresi

A case-control study was performed to verify the association between the risk factors for cerebrovascular disease and the syndrome of ventricular enlargement with gait apraxia (VEGAS). This syndrome was defined on the basis of clinical and CT criteria alone; however, it may be representative of patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus in whom gait disturbance is the initial symptom. Seventeen patients were matched for age and sex with one hospitalised and two general population controls. Among the risk factors considered we found a significant statistical association between VEGAS and hypertension (odds ratio = 3.14; p = 0.032), ischaemic heart disease (odds ratio = 4.20; p = 0.013), ECG ischaemic changes (odds ratio = 3.67; p = 0.029), low HDL-cholesterol levels (odds ratio = 3.75; p = 0.028) and diabetes (odds ratio = 6.00; p = 0.018). Our findings indicate that risk factors for cerebrovascular disease may play a role in the development of VEGAS.


Neurology | 2002

Prevalence and incidence of cluster headache in the Republic of San Marino

C. Tonon; S. Guttmann; M. Volpini; S. Naccarato; P. Cortelli; Roberto D'Alessandro

Abstract—Based on a preceding survey performed in 1985, the authors estimated the prevalence and incidence of cluster headache (CH) in the Republic of San Marino (26,628 inhabitants at 31 December 1999). All cases were diagnosed by direct interview according to International Headache Society criteria. The prevalence rate was 56/100,000 (95% CI 31.3 to 92.4), and the incidence rate was 2.5/100,000/year (95% CI 1.14 to 4.75). Most cases showed rare clusters. This is the first prospective study on the incidence of CH.


Journal of Neurology | 1996

Neurological complications of liver transplantation

Maria Guarino; Andrea Stracciari; Pazzaglia P; Sterzi R; Santilli I; Donato F; Roberto D'Alessandro

We examined 199 consecutive patients who underwent 220 liver transplantations, to define the type, frequency and aetiology of posttransplant neurological complications and their prognostic value. We found neurological complications in 63 patients (32%), mostly involving the central nervous system. The most frequent complications were mental status changes ranging from delirium to coma and seizures. The aetiology was multifactorial, cyclosporin A neurotoxicity being the main cause. Patients with neurological complications had a higher mortality rate than those without. In our series, neurological complications represented a major medical problem with increased morbidity and mortality.


Cephalalgia | 1994

International Headache Society Classification: Interobserver Reliability in the Diagnosis of Primary Headaches:

Franco Granella; Roberto D'Alessandro; Gc Manzoni; Rosanna Cerbo; C. Colucci d'Amato; Luigi Alberto Pini; Lidia Savi; C Zanferrari; Giuseppe Nappi

We assessed interobserver reliability of the International Headache Society (IBIS) classification for diagnosis of primary headaches. The study was performed on 103 patients consecutively seen at two Headache Centres. Each patient was given a structured interview recorded on videotape. Four experienced clinicians then reviewed the interviews separately and made a diagnosis of headache according to IHS criteria at the one- and two-digit levels. At both the one- and the two-digit level the agreement was substantial (Kappa = 0.74 and 0.65, respectively). The analysis of reliability for each of nine items necessary for diagnosis showed an agreement ranging from substantial (Kappa = 0.69) to almost perfect (Kappa = 0.89). Our results indicate that the IHS classification has a good reliability for the diagnosis of primary headaches at the one- and two-digit levels.


European Journal of Neurology | 2005

Epidemiology of status epilepticus in a rural area of northern Italy : a 2-year population-based study

Luca Vignatelli; Rita Rinaldi; M. Galeotti; P. de Carolis; Roberto D'Alessandro

We performed a 2‐year population‐based study on status epilepticus (SE) in adults in the rural area of Lugo di Romagna, northern Italy, to verify whether an area of low‐level urbanization has a lower risk of occurrence of SE (as recently suggested), different clinical features and short‐term prognosis than areas of high‐level urbanization. We found crude and age‐ and sex‐adjusted annual incidence rates of SE of 16.5/100 000 and 11.6/100 000, respectively. In patients under 60 years crude incidence was 2.9/100 000 and in the elderly (≥60 years) 38.6/100 000. Acute symptomatic SE accounted for 30% and a cerebrovascular pathology was the most frequently associated etiologic condition (60%). A history of seizures was reported in 41% of patients. The first therapeutic intervention was mainly benzodiazepines (lorazepam 46%; diazepam 33%). The 30‐day case fatality was 7%. We observed that the adult population of an area with a low level of urbanization has the same risk for SE, clinical features and short‐term prognosis as European urban areas. The only contrasting result is the 30‐day case fatality of 7% against the 39% found in the other Italian study (Bologna), despite the similarity of the SE features in these two areas of the same region. We infer that the short‐term prognosis of SE could also be considerably influenced by differences in health service organization (and hence management) possibly due to different levels of urbanization.

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