Ruggero Cattaneo
University of L'Aquila
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Featured researches published by Ruggero Cattaneo.
Journal of Electromyography and Kinesiology | 2012
Annalisa Monaco; Fabrizio Sgolastra; Irma Ciarrocchi; Ruggero Cattaneo
The purpose of this study was to assess the effect of a single 60 min TENS application on sEMG and kinesiographic activity in TMD patients in remission, and to assess the sEMG and kinesiographic effect of TENS in placebo and untreated groups. Sixty female subjects, selected according to the inclusion/exclusion criteria, suffering from unilateral TMD in remission were assigned to one of the following group: Group TENS, that received a single session of 60 min of TENS; Group Placebo that received a single session of 60 min of sham TENS; Group Control, that received no treatment. Pre- and post-treatment differences in sEMG of TA, MM, SCM, and DA and interocclusal distance values within groups were tested using the Wilcoxon test. Differences in sEMG and kinesiographic data, among the three groups, were assessed by Kruskal-Wallis test. Significant differences were only observed in the TENS group, for masticatory muscles of both sides; one-way analysis of variance revealed that sEMG values of masticatory muscles of both sides in the TENS group were significantly reduced, in comparison with placebo and control groups. Kinesiographic results showed that the vertical component of the interocclusal distance was significantly increased after TENS only in the TENS group. TENS could be effective to reduce the sEMG activity of masticatory muscles and to improve the interocclusal distance of TMD patients in remission; the placebo effect seems not present in the TENS application.
BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders | 2013
Annalisa Monaco; Fabrizio Sgolastra; Davide Pietropaoli; Mario Giannoni; Ruggero Cattaneo
BackgroundThe purpose of the present controlled clinical trial was to assess the effect of a single 60 min application of transcutaneous electrical nervous stimulation (TENS) at sensory stimulation threshold (STS), compared to the application of motor stimulation threshold (MTS) as well as to untreatment, on the surface electromyographic (sEMG) and kinesiographic activity of patients with tempormanbibular disorder (TMD).MethodsSixty female subjects, selected according to the inclusion/exclusion criteria, suffering from unilateral TMD in remission were assigned to MTS, STS or untreatment. Pre- and post-treatment differences in the sEMG activity of temporalis anterior (TA), masseter (MM), digastric (DA) and sternocleidomastoid muscles (SCM), as well in the interocclusal distance (ID), within group were tested using the Wilcoxon test, while differences among groups were assessed by Kruskal-Wallis test; the level of significance was set at p ≤ 0.05.ResultsSignificant pre- and post-treatment differences were observed in MTS and STS groups, for TA and MM of both sides; no significant difference was detected between MTS and STS groups. Kinesiographic results showed that the vertical component of ID was significantly increased after TENS in MTS and STS groups.ConclusionsSTS TENS could be effective, as well as MTS, in reduce the sEMG activity of masticatory muscles and to improve the ID of TMD patients in remission. Future studies are needed to confirm the results of the present study. Clinical relevance. The present study demonstrates that the application of TENS is effective in reduce the sEMG activity, as well as in increasing the ID of patients with TMD; our study did not support superior effectiveness of MTS or STS.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01832207
PLOS ONE | 2012
Annalisa Monaco; Ruggero Cattaneo; Luca Mesin; Irma Ciarrocchi; Fabrizio Sgolastra; Davide Pietropaoli
The role of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) was recently investigated in Temporomandibular disorders (TMD). Several authors argue that in subjects with TMD there is a dysregulation of ANS. Recent literature support that Pupillometry is a simple non-invasive tool to study ANS. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between TMD and ANS activity using pupillometry recording in Infrared light at rest Mandible Position (RP); Infrared light at Forced Habitual Occlusion (FHO); Yellow-green light at RP; Yellow-green light at FHO. Forty female subjects were enrolled: 20 case patients showed TMD based on the Research Diagnostic Criteria for TMD, and 20 control patients, aged matched, had no signs or symptoms of TMD. Statistical analysis was performed on average pupil size. Ratio between pupil size in FHO and RP (FHO/RP ratio) and yellow-green and infrared (light/darkness ratio) lighting were carried out. Within group differences of pupil size and of “ratio” were analyzed using a paired t test, while differences of pupil size between groups were tested using an unpaired t test. Statistical comparisons between groups showed no significant differences of absolute values of pupil dimension in RP and FHO, both in yellow-green and in infrared lighting. In addition, there were no significant differences within groups comparing RP and FHO in yellow-green light. In within group comparison of pupil size, differences between RP and FHO were significant in infrared conditions. Control subjects increased, whereas TMD patients decreased pupil size at FHO in infrared lightening. FHO/RP ratio in darkness and light/darkness ratio in RP were significantly different between groups. Taken together, these data suggest that TMD subjects have an impairment of the sympathetic-adrenergic component of the ANS to be activated under stress. The present study provides preliminary pupillometric data confirming that adrenergic function is dysregulated in patients with TMD.
Cranio-the Journal of Craniomandibular Practice | 2014
Annalisa Monaco; Ruggero Cattaneo; Luca Mesin; Edoardo Fiorucci; Davide Pietropaoli
Abstract Aims: Recently, it has been proposed that obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) is characterized by an imbalance in autonomic nervous tone. Pupil size has been considered a valid test for studying the autonomic nervous system (ANS). Pupillometry is a simple and non-invasive tool to assess the size and dynamics of the pupil. The purpose of this study was to evaluate, by pupillometry, the hypothesis that subjects with OSAS present ANS dysregulation. Methods: The study group included 10 males aged between 40 and 50 years with polysomnographic diagnoses of mild OSAS. The control group included 10 males with similar ages with an apnea–hypopnea index (AHI) of less than 5, after polysomnography. Pupillometry was performed by digital infrared pupillometer (25 frame/s). Recordings were processed to measure the area of the pupil frame by frame. The subjects underwent four subsequent recordings: infrared light at rest mandible position (RP); infrared light at forced habitual occlusion (FHO); yellow-green light at RP; and yellow-green light at FHO. According to literature, linear and non-linear information was extracted from the recordings. Results: As expected, the two groups did not differ statistically in age and body mass index (BMI), while there was a significant difference in the AHI. In the within-group comparison of pupil size, there were significant differences between RP and FHO under infrared conditions in the control group. There was a significant difference in the determinism percentage (Det%) in the RP infrared condition between the control and OSAS groups. Conclusions: The results of the current study confirm ANS dysregulation in OSAS patients and provide a new possible strategy for studying this pathology by using pupillometry through linear and non-linear mathematical models.
Cranio-the Journal of Craniomandibular Practice | 2014
Nicolae Chipaila; Fabrizio Sgolastra; Spadaro A; Davide Pietropaoli; Chiara Masci; Ruggero Cattaneo; Annalisa Monaco
Abstract Aims: The aim of this study was to evaluate the state of the art in the current literature regarding the effect of ultra low frequency–transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (ULF–TENS) on patients with temporomandibular disorders (TMD). Methodology: The authors reviewed the literature through a thorough manual and electronic research on PubMed database (using the Medical Subject Headings thesaurus) and subsequent analysis of all the found papers regarding the effect of TENS on TMD patients. No randomized controlled trials on the investigated topic were found. Only eight papers regarding controlled clinical trials (CCT) were selected according to the search strategy selection criteria. Results: According to the available literature and the authors’ experience, ULF–TENS seems to be a valid support in the management of TMD patients, but also a ‘provocative’ tool, so its application should always be monitored by electromyographic and electrognathographic analysis (before and after TENS). Conclusions: Further clinical studies (mainly randomized controlled trials) on ULF–TENS application in neuromuscular gnathology are needed.
BioMed Research International | 2013
Luca Mesin; Annalisa Monaco; Ruggero Cattaneo
Pupil is controlled by the autonomous nervous system (ANS). It shows complex movements and changes of size even in conditions of constant stimulation. The possibility of extracting information on ANS by processing data recorded during a short experiment using a low cost system for pupil investigation is studied. Moreover, the significance of nonlinear information contained in the pupillogram is investigated. We examined 13 healthy subjects in different stationary conditions, considering habitual dental occlusion (HDO) as a weak stimulation of the ANS with respect to the maintenance of the rest position (RP) of the jaw. Images of pupil captured by infrared cameras were processed to estimate position and size on each frame. From such time series, we extracted linear indexes (e.g., average size, average displacement, and spectral parameters) and nonlinear information using recurrence quantification analysis (RQA). Data were classified using multilayer perceptrons and support vector machines trained using different sets of input indexes: the best performance in classification was obtained including nonlinear indexes in the input features. These results indicate that RQA nonlinear indexes provide additional information on pupil dynamics with respect to linear descriptors, allowing the discrimination of even a slight stimulation of the ANS. Their use in the investigation of pathology is suggested.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Annalisa Monaco; Ruggero Cattaneo; Luca Mesin; Eleonora Ortu; Mario Giannoni; Davide Pietropaoli
Using computerized pupillometry, our previous research established that the autonomic nervous system (ANS) is dysregulated in patients suffering from temporomandibular disorders (TMDs), suggesting a potential role for ANS dysfunction in pain modulation and the etiology of TMD. However, pain modulation hypotheses for TMD are still lacking. The periaqueductal gray (PAG) is involved in the descending modulation of defensive behavior and pain through μ, κ, and δ opioid receptors. Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) has been extensively used for pain relief, as low-frequency stimulation can activate µ receptors. Our aim was to use pupillometry to evaluate the effect of low-frequency TENS stimulation of μ receptors on opioid descending pathways in TMD patients. In accordance with the Research Diagnostic Criteria for TMD, 18 females with myogenous TMD and 18 matched-controls were enrolled. All subjects underwent subsequent pupillometric evaluations under dark and light conditions before, soon after (end of stimulation) and long after (recovery period) sensorial TENS. The overall statistics derived from the darkness condition revealed no significant differences in pupil size between cases and controls; indeed, TENS stimulation significantly reduced pupil size in both groups. Controls, but not TMD patients, displayed significant differences in pupil size before compared with after TENS. Under light conditions, TMD patients presented a smaller pupil size compared with controls; the pupil size was reduced only in the controls. Pupil size differences were found before and during TENS and before and after TENS in the controls only. Pupillometry revealed that stimulating the descending opioid pathway with low-frequency sensory TENS of the fifth and seventh pairs of cranial nerves affects the peripheral target. The TMD patients exhibited a different pattern of response to TENS stimulation compared with the controls, suggesting that impaired modulation of the descending pain system may be involved in TMD.
Gerodontology | 2012
Annalisa Monaco; Ruggero Cattaneo; Chiara Masci; Spadaro A; Giuseppe Marzo
BACKGROUND Surface electromyography (SEMG) has been widely used in the recent years to study swallowing physiology, offering a valid and reliable tool for identifying normal swallowing. The goal of our study was to assess the contribution of denture fitness in the age-related increase of swallowing duration. METHODS Twenty denture wearers and 20 dentate individuals were analysed using SEMG and a computerised kinesiography of mandibular movement. Three spontaneous saliva swallowings were recorded for each patient with both their old and new prostheses. Three spontaneous saliva swallowings were recorded for each dentate person in two different recording sessions. RESULTS Old prosthesis mean swallowing time was 1.84 (SD ± 0.85) seconds while the new well-fitting prostheses needed a 1.28 (SD ± 0.55) (p = 0.0009) swallowing time. The difference in swallowing time was significant (p = 0.01) between dentate subjects and individuals wearing an old prosthesis. No significant difference was found between dentate subjects and the same prosthesis wearers when a new well-fitting prosthesis was worn. CONCLUSION Data presented in this work suggest that part of the increased duration of swallowing showed by elderly and healthy people is because of incorrect an dental prosthesis. Prolongation of swallowing duration in the elderly population could be reconsidered in the light of the quality of dental device worn by the aged population.
International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2010
Anthony P. Monaco; Spadaro A; Ruggero Cattaneo; Mario Giannoni
This study evaluated the effects of visual input on surface electromyography (sEMG) of some stomathognatic and neck muscles (anterior temporalis, masseter, anterior digastric and sternocleidomastoid muscles) in patients experiencing myogenous facial pain compared with healthy volunteers. All subjects kept the mandible at rest with teeth apart and underwent a 15-s sEMG recording of anterior temporalis, masseter, digastric and sternocleidomastoid muscles. Each recording was carried out with closed and then open eyes. The sEMG activity of each muscle was compared between the two groups. In the study group, anterior temporalis, masseter and sternocleidomastoid sEMG with closed eyes showed higher values compared with controls (p<0.05). In the study group, left and right anterior temporalis (p<0.003) and right digastric (p<0.03) sEMG with open eyes showed higher values than sEMG with closed eyes. In the control group no significant differences were observed between closed and open eyes. In patients with myogenous facial pain, visual input appears to be associated with a significant increase in the sEMG activity of some head and neck muscles.
IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement | 2012
Edoardo Fiorucci; Giovanni Bucci; Ruggero Cattaneo; Annalisa Monaco
The study of activities of superficial muscles in rest positions is today an interesting research field for many clinical applications. The evaluation of human surface muscle activity and stress, such as face muscles, is important for the functional study, diagnosis, and prosthetic and orthodontic therapy. The surface electromyography (SEMG) is a measurement technique widely adopted for evaluating the activity of body surface muscles in a noninvasive way, even if this is not a straightforward task, mainly because the signals present low signal-to-noise (S/N) ratios. To increase the S/N, traditional SEMG measurements are conducted during isometric activities, applying amplification and filtering of the low-frequency components; the final signal is not suitable for the evaluation of the muscular activity and stress in rest positions, as during the optometric examinations. The main goal of this paper is to propose a new measurement system capable of acquiring and processing surface electromyographic signals in rest position and of supplying a direct indication of the optimal eyeglass prescription. The main experimental results, obtained with a prototype of the proposed system, are presented and discussed.