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Dive into the research topics where Sara Giannantonio is active.

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Featured researches published by Sara Giannantonio.


Annals of Otology, Rhinology, and Laryngology | 2010

Serum Fatty Acids and Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Sudden Sensorineural Hearing Loss: A Case-Control Study

Gabriella Cadoni; Alessandro Scorpecci; Francesca Cianfrone; Sara Giannantonio; Gaetano Paludetti; Silvio Lippa

Objectives: We analyzed the relationships between sudden sensorineural hearing loss (SSNHL) and serum levels of fatty acids, total cholesterol, low-density lipoproteins (LDLs), and the antioxidant coenzyme Q10. Methods: Forty-three patients with SSNHL and 43 healthy subjects were enrolled in the study. The main outcome measures were serum levels of fatty acids, coenzyme Q10, total cholesterol, and LDLs. Results: On univariate logistic regression analysis, high levels of total cholesterol (p < 0.001), LDLs (p = 0.024), behenic acid (p < 0.001), docosahexaenoic acid (p < 0.001), linolenic acid (p = 0.017), and oleic acid (p < 0.001) and low levels of coenzyme Q10 (p < 0.001) and nervonic acid (p < 0.001) were associated with an elevated risk of SSNHL. On multivariate analysis, only hypercholesterolemia (p = 0.15) and low levels of coenzyme Q10 (p = 0.02) and nervonic acid (p = 0.005) were significantly associated with SSNHL. Conclusions: This is the first report of low serum levels of nervonic acid as an independent risk factor for SSNHL. Considering that hypercholesterolemia, high serum levels of LDL, and low serum levels of the antioxidant coenzyme Q10 were associated with SSNHL as well, we hypothesize that saturated fatty acids may play a role in determining the dysmetabolic state in a subset of SSNHL patients. Together, these findings suggest that not only total cholesterol and LDL levels, but also fatty acid determination, may help identify SSNHL patients with cardiovascular risk factors.


International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology | 2012

Investigation on the music perception skills of Italian children with cochlear implants.

Alessandro Scorpecci; Felicia Zagari; Giorgia Mari; Sara Giannantonio; Lucia D’Alatri; Walter Di Nardo; Gaetano Paludetti

OBJECTIVE To compare the music perception skills of a group of Italian-speaking children with cochlear implants to those of a group of normal hearing children; to analyze possible correlations between implanted childrens musical skills and their demographics, clinical characteristics, phonological perception, and speech recognition and production abilities. METHODS 18 implanted children aged 5-12 years and a reference group of 23 normal-hearing subjects with typical language development were enrolled. Both groups received a melody identification test and a song (i.e. original version) identification test. The implanted children also received a test battery aimed at assessing speech recognition, speech production and phoneme discrimination. RESULTS The implanted children scored significantly worse than the normal hearing subjects in both musical tests. In the cochlear implant group, phoneme discrimination abilities were significantly correlated with both melody and song identification skills, and length of device use was significantly correlated with song identification skills. CONCLUSIONS Experience with device use and phonological perception had a moderate-to-strong correlation to implanted childrens music perception abilities. In the light of these findings, it is reasonable to assume that a rehabilitation program specifically aimed at improving phonological perception could help pediatric cochlear implant recipients better understand the basic elements of music; moreover, a training aimed at improving the comprehension of the spectral elements of music could enhance implanted childrens phonological skills.


Laryngoscope | 2013

Noninvasive management of cochlear implant's inner magnet displacement after magnetic resonance

Walter Di Nardo; Sara Giannantonio; Lorenzo Schinaia; Eugenio De Corso; Gaetano Paludetti

MRI is a widespread and greatly helpful diagnostic tool, yet its use on cochlear implant patients is restricted by the presence of an inner magnet. We report on a case of magnet dislodgment after 1.5T MRI in a 31‐year‐old female with a Hi‐Res 90K cochlear implant.


Audiology and Neuro-otology | 2009

Multiple viral genome search in endolabyrinthic fluids of profoundly deaf patients: possible cytomegalovirus intracochlear reactivation.

W. Di Nardo; Paola Cattani; T. Lopizzo; Italo Cantore; Maria Raffaella Marchese; S. Marchetti; Alessandro Scorpecci; Sara Giannantonio; C. Parrilla; Francesca Cianfrone; Giovanni Fadda; Gaetano Paludetti

Background:The cause of about 30% of bilateral sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) is still unknown. A viral etiology is among the most frequently proposed ones and the supposed diagnosis is only based upon few clinical and laboratory data. The detection of viral presence within a damaged compartment may represent a way to supply interesting data for confirmation of viral etiology and to explain pathogenic mechanisms. Objectives:The aim of our study was to identify the possible presence of pathogenic viruses in the inner ear extracellular compartment in patients with bilateral severe sensorineural deafness of unknown etiology who underwent cochlear implant surgery. Methods: 4 patients, aged from 2 to 7 years and affected by SNHL underwent cochlear implantation surgery and, at the same time, endolabyrinthine fluid sampling. The samples were subsequently sent for viral nucleic acid extraction and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) treatment: multiplex PCR and realtime-PCR were used. In each endolabyrinthine fluid sample, cytomegalovirus (CMV), Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), varicella-zoster virus (VZV), herpes simplex virus type 1 and 2 (HSV-1, HSV-2) and enterovirus genomes were searched for. Results: One patient was positive for intracochlear CMV, as confirmed by another base-pair segment PCR. EBV, VZV, HSV and enterovirus were detected in none of the 4 patients. Conclusions: Our finding of CMV genome within the cochlea of a deaf patient without any evidence of acute and prenatal CMV infection suggests its possible role in postnatal inner ear injury through reactivation of latent virus within the cochlea. This hypothesis could also be considered valid for some patients with anti-CMV-IgG-positive serology and absence of endolabyrinthine viral genome since viruses can be in an inactive state at the time of fluid collection. PCR has proved to be a very useful tool in order to investigate infectious causes of deafness even for more than one virus type at a time and in a limited quantity of sample, such as the small volume of endolabyrinthine liquid collected from children during cochlear implant surgery.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Experience Changes How Emotion in Music Is Judged: Evidence from Children Listening with Bilateral Cochlear Implants, Bimodal Devices, and Normal Hearing

Sara Giannantonio; Melissa J. Polonenko; Blake C. Papsin; Gaetano Paludetti; Karen A. Gordon

Children using unilateral cochlear implants abnormally rely on tempo rather than mode cues to distinguish whether a musical piece is happy or sad. This led us to question how this judgment is affected by the type of experience in early auditory development. We hypothesized that judgments of the emotional content of music would vary by the type and duration of access to sound in early life due to deafness, altered perception of musical cues through new ways of using auditory prostheses bilaterally, and formal music training during childhood. Seventy-five participants completed the Montreal Emotion Identification Test. Thirty-three had normal hearing (aged 6.6 to 40.0 years) and 42 children had hearing loss and used bilateral auditory prostheses (31 bilaterally implanted and 11 unilaterally implanted with contralateral hearing aid use). Reaction time and accuracy were measured. Accurate judgment of emotion in music was achieved across ages and musical experience. Musical training accentuated the reliance on mode cues which developed with age in the normal hearing group. Degrading pitch cues through cochlear implant-mediated hearing induced greater reliance on tempo cues, but mode cues grew in salience when at least partial acoustic information was available through some residual hearing in the contralateral ear. Finally, when pitch cues were experimentally distorted to represent cochlear implant hearing, individuals with normal hearing (including those with musical training) switched to an abnormal dependence on tempo cues. The data indicate that, in a western culture, access to acoustic hearing in early life promotes a preference for mode rather than tempo cues which is enhanced by musical training. The challenge to these preferred strategies during cochlear implant hearing (simulated and real), regardless of musical training, suggests that access to pitch cues for children with hearing loss must be improved by preservation of residual hearing and improvements in cochlear implant technology.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2015

Mental workload estimations in unilateral deafened children.

Giulia Cartocci; Anton Giulio Maglione; Giovanni Vecchiato; Gianluca Di Flumeri; Alfredo Colosimo; Alessandro Scorpecci; Pasquale Marsella; Sara Giannantonio; Paolo Malerba; Gianluca Borghini; Pietro Aricò; Fabio Babiloni

Despite of technological innovations, noisy environments still constitute a challenging and stressful situation for words recognition by hearing impaired subjects. The evaluation of the mental workload imposed by the noisy environments for the recognition of the words in prelingually deaf children is then of paramount importance since it could affect the speed of the learning process during scholar period.The aim of the present study was to investigate different electroencephalographic (EEG) power spectral density (PSD) components (in theta4-8 Hz - and alpha - 8-12 Hz - frequency bands) to estimate the mental workload index in different noise conditions during a word recognition task in prelingually deaf children, a population not yet investigated in relation to the workload index during auditory tasks. A pilot study involving a small group of prelingually deaf children was then subjected to EEG recordings during an auditory task composed by a listening and a successive recognition of words with different noise conditions. Results showed that in the pre-word listening phase frontal EEG PSD in theta band and the ratio of the frontal EEG PSD in theta band and the parietal EEG PSD in alpha band (workload index; IWL) reported highest values in the most demanding noise condition. In addition, in the phase preceding the word forced-choice task the highest parietal EEG PSD in alpha band and IWL values were reported at the presumably simplest condition (noise emitted in correspondence of the subjects deaf ear). These results could suggest the prominence of EEG PSD theta component activity in the pre-word listening phase. In addition, a more challenging noise situation in the pre-choice phase would be so “over-demanding” to fail to enhance both the alpha power and the IWL in comparison to the already demanding “simple” condition.


Operations Research Letters | 2012

Steady state auditory evoked potentials in normal hearing subjects: evaluation of threshold and testing time.

Pasqualina Maria Picciotti; Sara Giannantonio; Gaetano Paludetti; Guido Conti

Background: Steady state responses (SSRs), between 75 and 110 Hz, evoked by auditory amplitude modulated single or multiple tone stimuli, may be used to estimate objective hearing threshold. Methods: The aim of this study was to compare SSRs and click-evoked auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) in both ears of 20 adults (10 males and 10 females, aged between 24 and 36 years) with normal hearing threshold. Results: Mean ABR threshold was found at 21.25 (±5.9) dB nHL. Mean SSR threshold was found at 15.6 (±9.6) dB nHL after a single frequency stimulus (1 kHz); at 10.5 (±18.2) dB nHL and at 7.1 (±12.4) dB nHL after bifrequency stimulation (0.5 and 2 kHz). SSR thresholds after multifrequency stimulation (0.5, 1, 2 and 4 kHz) were found, respectively, at 12.1 (±12.9) dB nHL, 12.2 (±12.8) dB nHL, 12.3 (±8.3) dB nHL and 18.9 (±17.2) dB nHL. Mean duration of the recording session was 6 min in the case of ABRs, while it was 25 min in the single frequency condition and 29 min in the multifrequency condition in the case of SSRs. Conclusion: SSRs can be used for frequency-specific objective audiometry. The multifrequency stimulation greatly reduces the whole testing time.


Acta Oto-laryngologica | 2014

Adaptation of cochlear implant fitting to various telecommunication systems: a proposal for a 'telephone map'

Sara Giannantonio; Walter Di Nardo; Lorenzo Schinaia; Gaetano Paludetti

Abstract Conclusions: Despite the innovations in cochlear implant (CI) technology in recent years, some auditory tasks remain difficult for CI recipients. This work proposes the creation of specific maps for telephone communication (via conventional phone and via Internet protocol, VoIP). In light of our preliminary results, we believe that our experimental maps might improve conventional telephone and Internet communications for CI recipients. Objectives: This study aimed to: (1) analyze the spectro-temporal characteristics of the signals; (2) evaluate speech recognition scores using two different types of telephone communication; and (3) change some map parameters on the basis of the previous signal analysis, to obtain a specific map for telephone use. Methods: Eleven Cochlear™ Nucleus® CI recipients were tested for bisyllabic word recognition in quiet using reproduced voice and transmitted voice via conventional telephone and Skype® using the habitual-ACE (SLB) map, and two experimental maps (F- and V-Map). Results: The results showed a worsening of word recognition scores with SLB-Map via telephone (30.5%) and VoIP (18.6%) compared with those achieved with the same map in an anechoic booth. In the experimental listening conditions, 65% and 54% of patients performed better with F- and V-Map, respectively, up to a maximum of performance improvement by 35% via telephone and 25% via VoIP.


Laryngoscope | 2015

A case-control study on proinflammatory genetic Polymorphisms on sudden sensorineural hearing loss

Gabriella Cadoni; Eleonora Gaetani; Pasqualina Maria Picciotti; Dario Arzani; Miriam Quarta; Sara Giannantonio; Gaetano Paludetti; Stefania Boccia

Sudden sensorineural hearing loss (SSNHL) is strictly related to inner ear vascular injuries and recently to some atherosclerotic risk factors. The pathogenic role of inflammatory molecules in atherosclerosis is well established. However, there is little knowledge about the potential role of inflammatory cytokines and adhesion molecules on SSNHL etiology.


Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery | 2016

Bimodal Stimulation in Prelingually Deaf Children Lessons from a Cross-sectional Survey

Alessandro Scorpecci; Sara Giannantonio; Concettina Pacifico; Pasquale Marsella

Objective (1) To survey the use of bimodal stimulation by prelingually deaf children receiving unilateral cochlear implantation and (2) to investigate demographic and audiologic factors explaining the use of bimodal stimulation. Study Design Cross-sectional survey. Setting Tertiary care institution. Subjects and Methods The study included 44 unilaterally implanted prelingually deaf children from a single institution, with a minimum follow-up of 1 year. During routine follow-up visits, an examiner interviewed parents on their children’s use of bimodal stimulation. At the same time, residual hearing and hearing aid gain in the contralateral ear were assessed. Results Approximately half of patients (52%) used bimodal stimulation. On average, bimodal users showed better mean unaided and aided thresholds than nonbimodal users (P < .001). A mean 250- to 500-Hz unaided threshold ≤90 dB HL in the contralateral, nonimplanted ear was associated with a higher probability of bimodal use (P = .008). Parental satisfaction with the contralateral hearing aid was inversely correlated with mean 125- to 500-Hz and 1000- to 4000-Hz unaided thresholds (P < .001) and mean 250- to 500-Hz and 1000- to 4000-Hz aided thresholds (P < .001). Conclusions A mean 250- to 500-Hz unaided threshold ≤90 dB HL is associated with a higher probability of bimodal use by prelingually deaf children. Better residual hearing is associated with a higher degree of parental satisfaction with the contralateral hearing aid. This information could be useful to counsel parents of prelingually deaf children, when deciding between bimodal stimulation and simultaneous bilateral cochlear implantation.

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Dive into the Sara Giannantonio's collaboration.

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Gaetano Paludetti

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Alessandro Scorpecci

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Walter Di Nardo

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Francesca Cianfrone

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Lorenzo Schinaia

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Guido Conti

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Pasqualina Maria Picciotti

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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W. Di Nardo

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Italo Cantore

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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