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Dive into the research topics where Susanna Mezzarobba is active.

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Featured researches published by Susanna Mezzarobba.


Rehabilitation Research and Practice | 2011

Treatment of Fatigue in Multiple Sclerosis Patients: A Neurocognitive Approach

Mauro Catalan; Alessandra De Michiel; Alessio Bratina; Susanna Mezzarobba; Lorella Pellegrini; Roberto Marcovich; Francesca Tamiozzo; Giovanna Servillo; Laura Zugna; Antonio Bosco; Arianna Sartori; Gilberto Pizzolato; Marino Zorzon

The objective of the study was to treat fatigue in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) by a neurocognitive rehabilitation program aimed at improving motor planning by using motor imagery (MI). Twenty patients with clinically definite MS complaining of fatigue were treated for five weeks with exercises of neurocognitive rehabilitation twice a week. Patients were evaluated by Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS), Modified Fatigue Impact Scale (MFIS), MSQoL54, Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS), and MS Functional Composite (MSFC). After treatment, a decrease in fatigue was detected with both FSS (P = 0.0001) and MFIS (P = 0.0001). MSFC (P = 0.035) and MSQoL54 (P = 0.002) scores improved compared to baseline. At six-month followup, the improvement was confirmed for fatigue (FSS, P = 0.0001; MFIS P = 0.01) and for the physical subscale of MSQoL54 (P = 0.049). No differences in disability scales were found. These results show that neurocognitive rehabilitation, based on MI, could be a strategy to treat fatigue in MS patients.


The Foot | 2009

Optokinetic analysis of gait cycle during walking with 1 cm- and 2 cm-high heel lifts

Roberto Valentini; B. Martinelli; Susanna Mezzarobba; A. De Michiel; M. Toffano

The use of orthotic heel lifts is proposed in many cases of Achilles tendon disorders as a first-line or conservative treatment. The use of heeled shoes induces a plantar flexion of the ankle joint with a consequent decrease in the tension forces acting onto the triceps surae. The question to address is how high must the heel be? Gait cycle using 1 cm- and 2 cm-high heel lifts was examined. Each measurement included kinetic and kinematic data on angular variation and moments and power at the hip, knee and foot. The study included 14 healthy subjects (5 males, 9 females) between 20 and 35 years of age. The data provided by the analysis of the force plate curve showed a statistically significant change in some parameters (plate forces, knee moments) which were deemed useful in the analysis of load transfer modalities. A very significant decrease (p=0.0001) was found in the amplitude of the curve expressing the force produced by the whole limb in response to ground reaction forces. This is expressed by a decrease in minimum values, suggesting a lower degree of energy absorption at heel strike, as well as maximum values reflecting the amount of energy generated at push off. This might suggest that by reducing energy absorption by the whole limb a 2-cm heel lift would have a protective effect for those muscles that are most significantly involved in this function, such as the tibiotarsal complex (triceps surae) and the knee complex (rectus femoris).


The Foot | 2012

Percutaneous repair of Achilles tendon ruptures with Tenolig: Quantitative analysis of postural control and gait pattern

Susanna Mezzarobba; S. Bortolato; A. Giacomazzi; G. Fancellu; R. Marcovich; Roberto Valentini

BACKGROUND Surgical approach in Achilles tendons rupture involved during the last years has becoming safer and less invasive as possible. Lots of study investigate the outcomes of the mini-invasive technique with Tenolig proving its good results, but never in the long-term. OBJECTIVES Our study want to emphasize the effectiveness of this treatment exploring the postural and gait patterns in a 24-month follow up. METHOD Patients did self-training exercises without specific supervision, instead of a particular postoperative rehabilitation protocol. We compared 21 patients to a control group of 19 health subjects using a clinical examination, a podobarometric and an optokinetic analysis. RESULTS Data shows no differences in time-distance parameters, despite a reduction of propulsion phase data, confirmed also by kinetic analysis. Podobarometric results show only a decrease in the anterior pressure of the injured limb (p=0.09). In standing an increase of anterior-posterior oscillation of the COP (center of pressure) (p=0.03). CONCLUSIONS The results underline the long-term outcome effectiveness of the technique but some functional alterations remain. This could be the reason of the weakness, which always affected the patients. Reduction of the triceps elongation and restoration of strength during the propulsion phase should be the key points in postoperative physiotherapy.


Frontiers in Neurology | 2018

Action Observation Plus Sonification. A Novel Therapeutic Protocol for Parkinson’s Patient with Freezing of Gait

Susanna Mezzarobba; Michele Grassi; Lorella Pellegrini; Mauro Catalan; Björn Krüger; Giovanni Furlanis; Paolo Manganotti; Paolo Bernardis

Freezing of gait (FoG) is a disabling symptom associated with falls, with little or no responsiveness to pharmacological treatment. Current protocols used for rehabilitation are based on the use of external sensory cues. However, cued strategies might generate an important dependence on the environment. Teaching motor strategies without cues [i.e., action observation (AO) plus Sonification] could represent an alternative/innovative approach to rehabilitation that matters most on appropriate allocation of attention and lightening cognitive load. We aimed to test the effects of a novel experimental protocol to treat patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) and FoG, using functional, and clinical scales. The experimental protocol was based on AO plus Sonification. 12 patients were treated with 8 motor gestures. They watched eight videos showing an actor performing the same eight gestures, and then tried to repeat each gesture. Each video was composed by images and sounds of the gestures. By means of the Sonification technique, the sounds of gestures were obtained by transforming kinematic data (velocity) recorded during gesture execution, into pitch variations. The same 8 motor gestures were also used in a second group of 10 patients; which were treated with a standard protocol based on a common sensory stimulation method. All patients were tested with functional and clinical scales before, after, at 1 month, and 3 months after the treatment. Data showed that the experimental protocol have positive effects on functional and clinical tests. In comparison with the baseline evaluations, significant performance improvements were seen in the NFOG questionnaire, and the UPDRS (parts II and III). Importantly, all these improvements were consistently observed at the end, 1 month, and 3 months after treatment. No improvement effects were found in the group of patients treated with the standard protocol. These data suggest that a multisensory approach based on AO plus Sonification, with the two stimuli semantically related, could help PD patients with FoG to relearn gait movements, to reduce freezing episodes, and that these effects could be prolonged over time.


Gait & Posture | 2018

Postural control deficit during sit-to-walk in patients with Parkinson’s disease and freezing of gait

Susanna Mezzarobba; Michele Grassi; Roberto Valentini; Paolo Bernardis

INTRODUCTION The intricate linkage between Freezing of Gait (FoG) and postural control in Parkinsons disease (PD) is unclear. We analyzed the impact of FoG on dynamic postural control. METHODS 24 PD patients, 12 with (PD + FoG), 12 without FoG (PD-FoG), and 12 healthy controls, were assessed in ON state. Mobility and postural control were measured with clinical scales (UPDRS III, BBS, MPAS) and with kinematic and kinetic analysis during three tasks, characterized by levels of increasing difficulty to plan sequential movement of postural control: walk (W), gait initiation (GI) and sit-to-walk (STW). RESULTS The groups were balanced by age, disease duration, disease severity, mobility and balance. During STW, the spatial distribution of COP trajectories in PD + FoG patients are spread over medial-lateral space more than in the PD-FoG (p < .001). Moreover, the distribution of COP positions. in the transition between sit-to-stand and gait initiation, is not properly shifted toward the leading leg, as in PD-FoG and healthy controls, but it is more centrally dispersed (p < .01) with a delayed weight forward progression (p < .05). In GI task and walk task, COM and COP differences are less evident and even absent between PD patients. CONCLUSION PD + FoG show postural control differences in STW, compared with PD-FoG and healthy. Different spatial distribution of COP trajectories, between two PD groups are probably due to a deficit to plan postural control during a more demanding motor pattern, such as STW.


European Journal of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine | 2016

Pharmacological and non-pharmacological strategies in the integrated treatment of pain in neurorehabilitation. Evidence and recommendations from the Italian Consensus Conference on Pain in Neurorehabilitation.

Stefano Tamburin; Marco Lacerenza; Gianluca Castelnuovo; Michela Agostini; Stefano Paolucci; Michelangelo Bartolo; Sara Bonazza; Angela Federico; Fabio Formaglio; Emanuele Maria Giusti; Gian Mauro Manzoni; Susanna Mezzarobba; Giada Pietrabissa; Andrea Polli; Andrea Turolla; Giorgio Sandrini


Twentieth International Congress of Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders | 2016

Therapeutic protocol for Parkinson’s patient with freezing based on action observation plus sonification : preliminary results

Susanna Mezzarobba; Michele Grassi; Mauro Catalan; Lorella Pellegrini; Roberto Valentini; Björn Krüger; Paolo Manganotti; Paolo Bernardis


Archive | 2016

Multisensory Action Observation a promising tool to improve freezing of gait in Parkinson’s disease: preliminary data

Susanna Mezzarobba; Michele Grassi; Mauro Catalan; Lorella Pellegrini; Roberto Valentini; Bjorn Krüger; Paolo Manganotti; Paolo Bernardis


Trieste Symposium in Perception and Cognition | 2015

Sit-to-Walk predicts Freezing of Gait status over than cognitive load: an experimental study with Linear Discriminant Analysis.

Susanna Mezzarobba; Giulia Sgubin; Michele Grassi; Roberto Valentini; Paolo Bernardis


Gait & Posture | 2015

Rise-to-walk kinematic and kinetic parameters in parkinson's patients with and without freezing of gait

Susanna Mezzarobba; Giulia Sgubin; Roberto Valentini

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