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Dive into the research topics where Silvia Facchini is active.

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Featured researches published by Silvia Facchini.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2011

Brain volume changes in Parkinson's disease and their relationship with cognitive and behavioural abnormalities

Roberta Biundo; Patrizia Formento-Dojot; Silvia Facchini; Annamaria Vallelunga; Luca Ghezzo; Luciano Foscolo; Francesca Meneghello; Angelo Antonini

Cognitive and behavioral abnormalities are frequent in Parkinsons disease (PD) but their anatomical correlates are still uncertain. We assessed a cohort of 59 PD patients with and without impulse control disorders (PD-ICDs and PD-CNTR) with magnetic resonance imaging and a comprehensive neuropsychological battery. Thirty-five PD patients presented ICDs according to DSM-IV criteria and Minnesota Impulsive Disorders Interview. We found areas of significant brain atrophy in the middle and superior frontal gyrus in the whole cohort of 59 PD patients vs. healthy controls but there were no morphometric changes in PD-ICDs vs. PD-CNTR. This was consistent with cognitive findings of relatively preserved function in PD-ICDs with the exception for slower performance in the Trail Making Test B-A suggesting difficulties to maintain goal-directed tasks and suppress irrelevant responses. Voxel Based Morphometric regression analysis (VBM) carried out using TMTB-A as independent factor showed a negative gray matter correlation between high TMTB-A scores and left middle frontal cortex, right posterior cingulate area, anterior cingulate and supplementary motor area bilaterally. Our results suggest that PD is characterized by an overall loss of gray matter in pre-frontal regions. However, the contribution of these changes to the development of ICDs is marginal.


Movement Disorders | 2015

Patterns of cortical thickness associated with impulse control disorders in Parkinson's disease.

Roberta Biundo; Luca Weis; Silvia Facchini; Patrizia Formento-Dojot; Annamaria Vallelunga; Manuela Pilleri; Daniel Weintraub; Angelo Antonini

Previous functional neuroimaging studies in Parkinsons disease (PD) patients with impulse control disorders (ICDs) demonstrated dysfunction of the reward network, although the extent of anatomical changes is unclear. The aim of this study was to measure brain cortical thickness and subcortical volumes, and to assess their relationship with presence and severity of symptoms, in PD patients with and without ICDs. We studied 110 PD patients (N = 58 with ICDs) and 33 healthy controls (all negative for ICDs) who underwent an extensive neurological, neuropsychological, and behavioral assessment as well as structural 1.5 Tesla magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Between‐group differences in brain cortical thickness and subcortical volumes, assessed with the FreeSurfer 5.1 tool, were analyzed. In patients with ICDs, we found significant cortical thinning in fronto‐striatal circuitry, specifically in the right superior orbitofrontal, left rostral middle frontal, bilateral caudal middle frontal region, and corpus callosum, as well as volume reduction in the right accumbens and increase in the left amygdala. Finally, we observed a positive association relationship between severity of impulsive symptoms and left rostral middle frontal, inferior parietal, and supramarginal areas. These results support the involvement of both reward and response inhibition networks in PD patients with ICDs. Moreover, their severity is associated with alterations in brain regions linked with reward and top‐down control networks. Increased understanding of the mechanisms underlying impulsive and compulsive behaviors might help improve therapeutic strategies for these important disorders.


Journal of Neurology | 2013

Cognitive and MRI correlates of orthostatic hypotension in Parkinson’s disease

Manuela Pilleri; Silvia Facchini; Elisabetta Gasparoli; Roberta Biundo; Laura Bernardi; Mauro Marchetti; Patrizia Formento; Angelo Antonini

Orthostatic hypotension (OH) is a frequent nonmotor feature of Parkinson’s disease (PD), and its occurrence has been associated with cognitive impairment. The underlying mechanism could be mediated by development of cerebrovascular disease induced by chronic or episodic hypoperfusion, but the extent of brain vascular load in PD patients with OH has never been investigated. This study aimed to assess the relationship between OH and cognitive function in PD patients and to investigate the contribution of brain vascular lesions. Forty-eight PD patients underwent a tilt table test (TT) to assess supine and orthostatic blood pressure as well as an extensive neuropsychological evaluation to evaluate cognitive function. Brain magnetic resonance imaging was acquired in 44/48 patients and analyzed by a visual semiquantitative scale. Twenty-three patients presented OH at TT (13/23 were symptomatic), and 25 did not. There were no differences in motor severity or disease duration between patients with and without OH. In patients with OH we found significantly worse cognitive performance in specific tasks, such as sustained attention, visuospatial and verbal memory, compared with patients without OH. However, there were no differences in vascular burden between the two groups. Our study confirms that there is an association between OH and selective cognitive deficits in PD, but rebuts the hypothesis that this is underlined by the development of cerebrovascular disease.


Parkinsonism & Related Disorders | 2014

Cognitive profiling of Parkinson disease patients with mild cognitive impairment and dementia

Roberta Biundo; Luca Weis; Silvia Facchini; Patrizia Formento-Dojot; Annamaria Vallelunga; Manuela Pilleri; Angelo Antonini

BACKGROUND Prevalence of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and dementia in Parkinson disease (PD) is variable because different classification criteria are applied and there is lack of consensus about neuropsychological tests and cut-off used for cognitive profiling. Given the important therapeutic consequences for patient management, we aimed at identifying suitable diagnostic cognitive tests and respective screening cut-off values for MCI and dementia in PD (PDD). METHODS We evaluated 105 PD patients using an extensive neuropsychological battery categorized as PD without cognitive impairment (PD-CNT) (35%), PD-MCI (47%) and PDD (18%) based on established criteria and calculated Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves. RESULTS We found different sensitivity and specificity among neuropsychological tests in detecting PD-MCI and PDD. In particular performance in attention/set shifting, verbal memory and language abilities, discriminated both PD-MCI and PDD from PD-CNT. Abilities involved mainly in semantic retrieval mechanisms discriminated PD-CNT from PD-MCI but also PD-MCI from PDD. Finally deficits in executive and visual-spatial abilities were only affected in PDD. CONCLUSION Our data point to an independent and different load of each test in defining different PD cognitive statuses. These findings can help selection of appropriate cognitive batteries in longitudinal studies and definition of stage-specific therapeutic targets.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Anatomical Correlates of Cognitive Functions in Early Parkinson's Disease Patients

Roberta Biundo; Massimiliano Calabrese; Luca Weis; Silvia Facchini; Gianluigi Ricchieri; Paolo Gallo; Angelo Antonini

Background Cognitive deficits may occur early in Parkinsons disease (PD) but the extent of cortical involvement associated with cognitive dysfunction needs additional investigations. The aim of our study is to identify the anatomical pattern of cortical thickness alterations in patients with early stage PD and its relationship with cognitive disability. Methods We recruited 29 PD patients and 21 healthy controls. All PD patients performed an extensive neuropsychological examination and 14 were diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment (PD-MCI). Surface-based cortical thickness analysis was applied to investigate the topographical distribution of cortical and subcortical alterations in early PD compared with controls and to assess the relationship between cognition and regional cortical changes in PD-MCI. Results Overall PD patients showed focal cortical (occipital-parietal areas, orbito-frontal and olfactory areas) and subcortical thinning when compared with controls. PD-MCI showed a wide spectrum of cognitive deficits and related significant regional thickening in the right parietal-frontal as well as in the left temporal-occipital areas. Conclusion Our results confirm the presence of changes in grey matter thickness at relatively early PD stage and support previous studies showing thinning and atrophy in the neocortex and subcortical regions. Relative cortical thickening in PD-MCI may instead express compensatory neuroplasticity. Brain reserve mechanisms might first modulate cognitive decline during the initial stages of PD.


Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 2017

Weight loss is associated with improvements in cognitive function among overweight and obese people: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Nicola Veronese; Silvia Facchini; Brendon Stubbs; Claudio Luchini; Marco Solmi; Enzo Manzato; Giuseppe Sergi; Stefania Maggi; Theodore D. Cosco; Luigi Fontana

HIGHLIGHTSIn our meta‐analysis, weight loss was associated with an improvement in attention and memory.Executive function and language improved in longitudinal and RCT studies, respectively.Intentional weight loss should be promoted in obese/overweight people. ABSTRACT Whilst obesity is associated with a higher risk of cognitive impairment, the influence of weight loss on cognitive function in obese/overweight people is equivocal. We conducted a meta‐analysis of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and longitudinal studies evaluating the influence of voluntary weight loss on cognitive function in obese/overweight individuals. Articles were acquired from a systematic search of major databases from inception till 01/2016. A random effect meta‐analysis of weight loss interventions (diet, physical activity, bariatric surgery) on different cognitive domains (memory, attention, executive functions, language and motor speed) was conducted. Twenty studies (13 longitudinal studies = 551 participants; 7 RCTs = 328 treated vs. 140 controls) were included. Weight loss was associated with a significant improvement in attention and memory in both longitudinal studies and RCTs, whereas executive function and language improved in longitudinal and RCT studies, respectively. In conclusion, intentional weight loss in obese/overweight people is associated with improvements in performance across various cognitive domains. Future adequately powered RCTs are required to confirm/refute these findings.


Parkinsonism & Related Disorders | 2014

Heart rate circadian profile in the differential diagnosis between Parkinson disease and multiple system atrophy.

Manuela Pilleri; Giorgio Levedianos; Luca Weis; Elisabetta Gasparoli; Silvia Facchini; Roberta Biundo; Patrizia Formento-Dojot; Angelo Antonini

Clinical diagnostic criteria indicate presence of autonomic features as the primary hallmark of Multiple System Atrophy (MSA). However involvement of the autonomic system is also a recognized feature of Parkinsons Disease (PD), yielding a broad clinical overlap between the two diseases. Laboratory assessments may help in the differential diagnosis between PD and MSA. Ambulatory Monitoring of Blood Pressure (AMBP) is a suitable tool to study the circadian rhythm of blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR). Different studies reported a reduction of physiological BP nocturnal dipping in PD and MSA patients, but failed to identify a distinctive pattern discriminating the two diseases. On the other hand, HR nocturnal behavior has not been exhaustively analyzed. In the present study we compared the profiles of HR circadian rhythm in 61 PD and 19 MSA patients who underwent 24 h AMBP. We found higher nocturnal HR (nHR) (71.5 beats/min ± 7.4) in MSA compared with PD (63.8 beats/min ± 9.6) as well as significantly lower nocturnal decline of HR (ndHR) in MSA (7.3% ± 8.2) vs. PD (14% ± 7.5). At a Receiver Operating Curve analysis nHR and ndHR significantly discriminated MSA from PD. nHR showed a sensitivity of 84.2% and a specificity of 62.3% (AUC 0.76; 95% IC 0.65-0.85); ndHR showed a sensitivity of 68% of and a specificity of 77% (AUC 0.72; 95% IC 0.61-0.82). According to our findings, nHR is increased and ndHR is reduced in MSA compared to PD. Moreover, these two indices discriminate between the two diseases with acceptable accuracy.


Liver International | 2013

Sleep-Wake profiles in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis.

Sara Montagnese; Letizia M. Nsemi; N. Cazzagon; Silvia Facchini; Laura Costa; Nora V. Bergasa; Piero Amodio; Annarosa Floreani

Impaired sleep quality and daytime sleepiness have been described in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC). However, no information is available on their sleep timing/diurnal preference.


Cns Spectrums | 2017

Systematic review and meta-analysis of the efficacy and safety of minocycline in schizophrenia

Marco Solmi; Nicola Veronese; Nita Thapa; Silvia Facchini; Brendon Stubbs; Michele Fornaro; André F. Carvalho; Christoph U. Correll

OBJECTIVE Our aim was to perform an updated systematic review and meta-analysis on the efficacy and safety of adjunctive minocycline as a treatment of schizophrenia. METHODS We conducted a PubMed/Scopus database search from inception to 3 February 2016 for randomized, placebo-controlled trials (RCTs), open non-randomized studies, and case reports/series evaluating minocycline in patients with schizophrenia. Random-effects meta-analysis of positive, negative, depressive, and cognitive symptom rating scales, discontinuation and adverse effects rates calculating standardized mean difference (SMD), and risk ratios±95% confidence intervals (CI 95%) were calculated. RESULTS Six RCTs were eligible (minocycline n=215, placebo n=198) that demonstrated minocyclines superiority versus placebo for reducing endpoint Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) total scores (SMD=-0.59; CI 95%=[1.15, -0.03]; p=0.04), negative (SMD=-0.76; CI 95%=[-1.21, -0.31]; p=0.001); general subscale scores (SMD=-0.44; CI 95%=[-0.88, -0.00]; p=0.05), Clinical Global Impressions scores (SMD=-0.50; CI 95%=[-0.78, -0.22]; p<0.001); and executive functioning (SMD=0.22; CI 95%=[0.01, 0.44]; p=0.04). Endpoint PANSS positive symptom scores (p=0.13), depression rating scale scores (p=0.43), attention (p=0.47), memory (p=0.52), and motor speed processing (p=0.50) did not significantly differ from placebo, before execution of a trim-and-fill procedure. Minocycline did not differ compared to placebo on all-cause discontinuation (p=0.56), discontinuation due to inefficacy (p=0.99), and intolerability (p=0.51), and due to death (p=0.32). Data from one open-label study (N=22) and three case series (N=6) were consistent with the metaanalytic results. CONCLUSIONS Minocycline appears to be an effective adjunctive treatment option in schizophrenia, improving multiple relevant disease dimensions. Moreover, minocycline has an acceptable safety and tolerability profile. However, more methodologically sound and larger RCTs remain necessary to confirm and extend these results.


Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience | 2014

A new clinical tool for assessing numerical abilities in neurological diseases: numerical activities of daily living.

Carlo Semenza; Francesca Meneghello; Giorgio Arcara; Francesca Burgio; Francesca Gnoato; Silvia Facchini; Silvia Benavides-Varela; Maurizio Clementi; Brian Butterworth

The aim of this study was to build an instrument, the numerical activities of daily living (NADL), designed to identify the specific impairments in numerical functions that may cause problems in everyday life. These impairments go beyond what can be inferred from the available scales evaluating activities of daily living in general, and are not adequately captured by measures of the general deterioration of cognitive functions as assessed by standard clinical instruments like the MMSE and MoCA. We assessed a control group (n = 148) and a patient group affected by a wide variety of neurological conditions (n = 175), with NADL along with IADL, MMSE, and MoCA. The NADL battery was found to have satisfactory construct validity and reliability, across a wide age range. This enabled us to calculate appropriate criteria for impairment that took into account age and education. It was found that neurological patients tended to overestimate their abilities as compared to the judgment made by their caregivers, assessed with objective tests of numerical abilities.

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