Stefano Bembich
University of Trieste
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Featured researches published by Stefano Bembich.
Neonatology | 2013
Anant Khositseth; Natthachai Muangyod; Pracha Nuntnarumit; Thibault Senterre; Thomas M. Berger; Matteo Fontana; Martin Stocker; Roger F. Soll; Katharine A.G. Squires; Antonio G De Paoli; Mehmet Nevzat Cizmeci; Kayihan Akin; Mehmet Kenan Kanburoglu; Ahmet Zulfikar Akelma; Hilal Andan; Onur Erbukucu; Mustafa Mansur Tatli; Ozge Altun Koroglu; Mehmet Yalaz; Erturk Levent; Mete Akisu; Nilgun Kultursay; Chris E. Williams; Peter A. Dargaville; Stefano Bembich; Riccardo Davanzo; Pierpaolo Brovedani; Andrea Clarici; Stefano Massaccesi; Sergio Demarini
adverse effects of cooling and ‘early’ indicators of neurodevelopmental outcome. Data Collection and Analysis: Four review authors independently selected, assessed the quality of and extracted data from the included studies. Study authors were contacted for further information. Meta-analyses were performed using risk ratios (RR) and risk differences (RD) for dichotomous data, and weighted mean difference for continuous data with 95% confidence intervals (CI). Main Results: We included 11 randomized controlled trials in this updated review, comprising 1,505 term and late preterm infants with moderate/severe encephalopathy and evidence of intrapartum asphyxia. Therapeutic hypothermia resulted in a statistically significant and clinically important reduction in the combined outcome of mortality or major neurodevelopmental disability to 18 months of age (typical RR 0.75 (95% CI 0.68–0.83); typical RD –0.15, 95% CI –0.20 to –0.10); number needed to treat for an additional beneficial outcome (NNTB) 7 (95% CI 5–10) (8 studies, 1,344 infants). Cooling also resulted in statistically significant reductions in mortality (typical RR 0.75 (95% CI 0.64–0.88), typical RD –0.09 (95% CI –0.13 to –0.04); NNTB 11 (95% CI 8–25) (11 studies, 1,468 infants) and in neurodevelopmental disability in survivors (typical RR 0.77 (95% CI 0.63–0.94), typical RD –0.13 (95% CI –0.19 to –0.07); NNTB 8 (95% CI 5–14) (8 studies, 917 infants). Some adverse effects of hypothermia included an increase sinus bradycardia and a significant increase in thrombocytopenia. Cochrane Abstract
Chemical Senses | 2010
Stefano Bembich; Carmela Lanzara; Andrea Clarici; Sergio Demarini; Beverly J. Tepper; Paolo Gasparini; Domenico Leonardo Grasso
Although bitter taste has a crucial role in nutrition by preventing the ingestion of toxic foods, there are few studies on bitter taste neuroimaging. To identify cortical areas involved in bitter taste perception and to determine if individual differences in taste sensitivity to 6-n-propylthiouracil (PROP) are represented in the brain by different cortical activation patterns, we examined 48 healthy volunteers using functional near-infrared spectroscopy. Participants rated the perceived intensity of filter paper disks impregnated with PROP and NaCl during the imaging procedure and were then classified as PROP tasters and nontasters. We monitored cortical activity in both the anterior and posterior regions of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and in the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC). No activity was detected in the anterior DLPFC in any of the participants. However, during the administration of PROP, significant cortical activation was detected in the more posterior regions of the left DLPFC and in the left and right VLPFC but only in PROP tasters. PROP nontasters showed no cortical activity in these areas. These data suggest that the prefrontal cortex is involved in the conscious perception of the bitter taste of PROP and that the pattern of activity is consistent with individual differences in the ability to taste this compound. Thus, the PROP phenotype is associated with fundamental differences in cortical taste processing.
Neonatology | 2013
Stefano Bembich; Riccardo Davanzo; Pierpaolo Brovedani; Andrea Clarici; Stefano Massaccesi; Sergio Demarini
Background: Newborns perceive pain, and several non-pharmacologic analgesic methods have been used during painful procedures. Activation of the neonatal somatosensory cortex, in association with a painful procedure without analgesia, has been demonstrated by two-channel near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS). Objectives: To evaluate both cortical and behavioural responses of healthy term newborns to a painful procedure during two non-pharmacologic analgesic interventions, i.e. glucose solution and breastfeeding. Methods: The effects of glucose and breastfeeding on pain-associated neonatal cortical activity were studied in two groups (n = 30) by multichannel NIRS during a heel prick. Cortical activation was identified by variations in oxygenated haemoglobin. Neonatal pain expression was assessed by a validated scale. Results: No significant variations in cortical activity emerged using glucose solution, whereas breastfed newborns showed widespread cortical activation. Breastfed neonates showed significantly less behavioural pain expression. Conclusions: Glucose is associated with no significant cortical activation and may interfere with pain-associated response at the cortical level. Conversely, breastfeeding analgesia is associated with generalized cortical activation and may act by multisensory stimulation, possibly overwhelming pain perception.
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2014
Stefano Bembich; Andrea Clarici; Cristina Vecchiet; Giulio Baldassi; Gabriele Cont; Sergio Demarini
Prefrontal cortex plays an important role in decision making (DM), supporting choices in the ordinary uncertainty of everyday life. To assess DM in an unpredictable situation, a playing card task, such as the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT), has been proposed. This task is supposed to specifically test emotion-based learning, linked to the integrity of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (VMPFC). However, the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) has demonstrated a role in IGT performance too. Our aim was to study, by multichannel near-infrared spectroscopy, the contribution of DLPFC to the IGT execution over time. We tested the hypothesis that low and high risk choices would differentially activate DLPFC, as IGT execution progressed. We enrolled 11 healthy adults. To identify DLPFC activation associated with IGT choices, we compared regional differences in oxy-hemoglobin variation, from baseline to the event. The time course of task execution was divided in four periods, each one consisting of 25 choices, and DLPFC activation was distinctly analyzed for low and high risk choices in each period. We found different time courses in DLPFC activation, associated with low or high risk choices. During the first period, a significant DLPFC activation emerged with low risk choices, whereas, during the second period, we found a cortical activation with high risk choices. Then, DLPFC activation decreased to non-significant levels during the third and fourth period. This study shows that DLPFC involvement in IGT execution is differentiated over time and according to choice risk level. DLPFC is activated only in the first half of the task, earlier by low risk and later by high risk choices. We speculate that DLPFC may sustain initial and more cognitive functions, such as attention shifting and response inhibition. The lack of DLPFC activation, as the task progresses, may be due to VMPFC activation, not detectable by fNIRS, which takes over the IGT execution in its second half.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2015
Andrea Clarici; Sandra Pellizzoni; Secondo Guaschino; Salvatore Alberico; Stefano Bembich; Rosella Giuliani; Antonia Short; Giuseppina Guarino; Jaak Panksepp
Oxytocin is a neuropeptide that is active in the central nervous system and is generally considered to be involved in prosocial behaviors and feelings. In light of its documented positive effect on maternal behavior, we designed a study to ascertain whether oxytocin exerts any therapeutic effects on depressive symptoms in women affected by maternal postnatal depression. A group of 16 mothers were recruited in a randomized double-blind study: the women agreed to take part in a brief course of psychoanalytic psychotherapy (12 sessions, once a week) while also being administered, during the 12-weeks period, a daily dose of intranasal oxytocin (or a placebo). The pre-treatment evaluation also included a personality assessment of the major primary-process emotional command systems described by Panksepp () and a semi-quantitative assessment by the therapist of the mother’s depressive symptoms and of her personality. No significant effect on depressive symptomatology was found following the administration of oxytocin (as compared to a placebo) during the period of psychotherapy. Nevertheless, a personality trait evaluation of the mothers, conducted in our overall sample group, showed a decrease in the narcissistic trait only within the group who took oxytocin. The depressive (dysphoric) trait was in fact significantly affected by psychotherapy (this effect was only present in the placebo group so it may reflect a positive placebo effect enhancing the favorable influence of psychotherapy on depressive symptoms) but not in the presence of oxytocin. Therefore, the neuropeptide would appear to play some role in the modulation of cerebral functions involved in the self-centered (narcissistic) dimension of the suffering that can occur with postnatal depression. Based on these results, there was support for our hypothesis that what is generally defined as postnatal depression may include disturbances of narcissistic affective balance, and oxytocin supplementation can counteract that type of affective disturbance. The resulting improvements in well-being, reflected in better self-centering in post-partuent mothers, may in turn facilitate better interpersonal acceptance of (and interactions with) the child and thereby, improved recognition of the child’s needs.
Psychological Reports | 2015
Lorenzo Pascazio; Stefano Bembich; Ilaria Nardone; Cristina Vecchiet; Giuseppina Guarino; Andrea Clarici
The theoretical perspective on affective neuroscience advanced by Panksepp, identified six basic innate affective systems: the SEEK, FEAR, ANGER, SADNESS, PLAY, and CARE systems. It has been proposed that the fundamental elements of human personality and its variants may be based on the different expressions of these basic emotional systems and their combinations. A self-report inventory, the Affective Neuroscience Personality Scales (ANPS), has been devised with the aim of studying and evaluating personality from this perspective. This study reports data on the initial validation of ANPS Italian translation on a sample of 418 adult participants. Descriptive statistics for each scale were calculated, assessing also their internal consistency, as a measure of reliability and factorial validity. Acceptable internal consistency was found in all but one scale (SADNESS), and a second-order factor analysis identified a more general affective feature of personality hinging on relational characteristics, independent of the dimensions of general positive and negative affect.
Acta Paediatrica | 2015
Stefano Bembich; Pierpaolo Brovedani; Gabriele Cont; Laura Travan; Veronica Grassi; Sergio Demarini
Cerebral near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) has already been used to detect pain-associated cortical activity in newborn infants. Two-channel NIRS has identified significant responses in cortical areas, such as the somatosensory cortex, in association with painful blood sampling procedures (1–3). However, neuroimaging studies in adults have showed that a painful conscious experience activated additional cortical areas, such as the motor cortex and the secondary somatosensory cortex (4). Moreover, the adult primary somatosensory cortex exhibits a somatotopic organisation in processing noxious stimulations (5), similar to the somatotopic cortical representation of nonpainful stimuli. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in a healthy non-sedated term-born newborn infant showed that a pinprick stimulation on the foot bilaterally activated the primary and secondary somatosensory cortex (6). Cortical activation was localised in a somatosensory area appropriate for foot representation. In this study, we used a multichannel NIRS system, which allowed a higher spatial resolution than two-channel devices (7), to assess pain-associated cortical activity during a heel prick for blood sampling, in healthy full-term infants. The aim of the study was to assess the feasibility of multichannel NIRS for studying pain-associated cortical activation in non-sedated newborn infants. We tested the hypothesis that the cortical representation of pain on the somatosensory cortex in the newborn infant does not topographically differ from that of an adult.
Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics | 2009
Lorenzo Pascazio; Pierluigi Morosini; Stefano Bembich; Ilaria Nardone; Andrea Clarici; Lionello Barbina; Ranieri Zuttion; Antonella Gigantesco
The debate about the adoption of standard multidimensional geriatric assessment instruments is mainly due to the lack of consensus on the feasibility and requirements for such instruments by both the health and the social care professions. A tool called ValGraf was developed in the attempt to give an original answer to these and other controversial issues. The aim of this study was to evaluate the ValGraf for acceptability, concurrent validity and factorial structure. The functional and cognitive impairments as ascertained by the ValGraf were compared with Katz index and Folsteins Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE). Subjects (N=210) of four nursing homes were assessed by two independent teams of nurses. The factorial validity study involved 8280 subjects living in nursing homes. Assessments were conducted throughout the 2001 by 20 geriatricians. The agreement between the ValGraf sections concerning independence in daily living and Katzs index was almost total (r=0.96) and that between ValGraf items on cognition and MMSE was very good (0.73). Factor analysis revealed that 13 coherent factors explained 53% of total variance. ValGraf was proved to be acceptable and comprehensive, criterion valid, at least as daily activities and cognitive status are concerned, and to have a coherent factorial structure.
Pain | 2016
Stefano Bembich; Francesca Marrazzo; Alice Barini; Paola Ravalico; Gabriele Cont; Sergio Demarini
Abstract The aim of the study was to investigate whether cortical response to a repeated noxious procedure may change over time in preterm infants. Possible reasons for change are: (1) advancing maturation of central nervous system; and (2) increasing experience with noxious procedures during hospital stay. Sixteen preterm infants were recruited, with a postmenstrual age (PMA) ranging between 29 and 36 weeks. Newborns were assessed during a heel-prick procedure, once a week for at least 3 consecutive times. Multichannel near-infrared spectroscopy was used to detect cortical activation, by measuring increase in cortical oxy-haemoglobin (HbO2). Parietal, temporal, and posterior frontal areas were monitored bilaterally. By regression analysis, we studied the effect of (1) increasing PMA and (2) increasing number of heel pricks, on the magnitude of cortical activation. We observed a bilateral nociceptive event-related activation of the posterior frontal cortex, mainly contralateral to the side pricked. Additionally, we found a significant positive effect of PMA, as HbO2 progressively increased in the posterior frontal cortex (P < 0.001), bilaterally, over time. Conversely, the degree of cortical activation decreased as the number of noxious events increased (P < 0.002). We conclude the following: (1) Preterm newborns showed a significant activation of the posterior frontal cortex in association with noxious stimuli; (2) Cortical activation was progressively greater with increasing PMA; (3) There was an inverse relationship between cortical activation and the number of heel pricks. We speculate that such findings may be due to both endogenous cortical maturation and experience-dependent neuroplasticity of the developing brain (eg, synaptogenesis, synaptic pruning).
Medical Science Monitor | 2011
Stefano Bembich; Sergio Demarini; Andrea Clarici; Stefano Massaccesi; Domenico Loenardo Grasso
Summary Background The Wada test is usually used for pre-surgical assessment of language lateralization. Considering its invasiveness and risk of complications, alternative methods have been proposed but they are not always applicable to non-cooperative patients. In this study we explored the possibility of using optical topography (OT) – a multichannel near-infrared system – for non-invasive assessment of hemispheric language dominance during passive listening. Material/Methods Cortical activity was monitored in a sample of healthy, adult Italian native speakers, all right-handed. We assessed changes in oxy-haemoglobin concentration in temporal, parietal and posterior frontal lobes during a passive listening of bi-syllabic words and vowel-consonant-vowel syllables lasting less then 3 minutes. Activated channels were identified by t tests. Results Left hemisphere showed significant activity only during the passive listening of bi-syllabic words. Specifically, the superior temporal gyrus, the supramarginal gyrus and the posterior inferior parietal lobe were activated. Conclusions During passive listening of bi-syllabic words, right handed healthy adults showed a significant activation in areas already known to be involved in speech comprehension. Although more research is needed, OT proved to be a promising alternative to the Wada test for non-invasive assessment of hemispheric language lateralization, even if using a particularly brief trial, which has been designed for future applications with non-cooperative subjects.