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Dive into the research topics where Valentina Citton is active.

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Featured researches published by Valentina Citton.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2012

Early Primary Cytomegalovirus Infection in Pregnancy: Maternal Hyperimmunoglobulin Therapy Improves Outcomes Among Infants at 1 Year of Age

Silvia Visentin; Renzo Manara; Laura Milanese; Anna Da Roit; Gabriella Forner; Eleonora Salviato; Valentina Citton; Fioretta Marciani Magno; Eva Orzan; Carla Morando; Riccardo Cusinato; Carlo Mengoli; Giorgio Palù; Mario Ermani; Roberto Rinaldi; Erich Cosmi; Nadia Gussetti

BACKGROUND Primary cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection during pregnancy is the leading infectious cause of congenital neurological disabilities. Early CMV infection carries a higher risk of adverse neonatal outcome (sensorineural hearing loss or neurological deficits). Intravenous hyperimmunoglobulin (HIG) therapy seems to be promising, but its efficacy needs further investigation. METHODS Since 2002, we have enrolled consecutively all pregnant women with early (ie, before gestational week 17) CMV infection. Beginning in 2007, all women were offered treatment with HIG (200 UI per kilogram of maternal weight, in a single intravenous administration). Outcome of infants was evaluated at the age of 1 year. RESULTS Of the 592 women with early primary CMV infection, amniocentesis for CMV DNA detection was performed for 446. Of the 92 CMV-positive fetuses, pregnancy was terminated for 24, HIG was administered to mothers of 31, and no treatment was received by mothers of 37. Fetuses of treated mothers did not differ from fetuses of nontreated mothers according to mothers age, gestational week of infection, CMV load, or detection of abnormal ultrasonography findings. At the 1-year evaluation, 4 of 31 infants with treated mothers (13%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1%-25%) and 16 of 37 infants with nontreated mothers (43%; 95% CI, 27%-59%) presented with poor outcomes (P < .01, by the 2-tailed Fisher exact test). CONCLUSIONS HIG treatment improved the outcome of fetuses from women who had primary CMV infection before gestational week 17.


Nutrients | 2013

Cobalamin Deficiency: Clinical Picture and Radiological Findings

Chiara Briani; Chiara Dalla Torre; Valentina Citton; Renzo Manara; Sara Pompanin; Gianni Binotto; Fausto Adami

Vitamin B12 deficiency causes a wide range of hematological, gastrointestinal, psychiatric and neurological disorders. Hematological presentation of cobalamin deficiency ranges from the incidental increase of mean corpuscular volume and neutrophil hypersegmentation to symptoms due to severe anemia, such as angor, dyspnea on exertion, fatigue or symptoms related to congestive heart failure, such as ankle edema, orthopnea and nocturia. Neuropsychiatric symptoms may precede hematologic signs and are represented by myelopathy, neuropathy, dementia and, less often, optic nerve atrophy. The spinal cord manifestation, subacute combined degeneration (SCD), is characterized by symmetric dysesthesia, disturbance of position sense and spastic paraparesis or tetraparesis. The most consistent MRI finding is a symmetrical abnormally increased T2 signal intensity confined to posterior or posterior and lateral columns in the cervical and thoracic spinal cord. Isolated peripheral neuropathy is less frequent, but likely overlooked. Vitamin B12 deficiency has been correlated negatively with cognitive functioning in healthy elderly subjects. Symptoms include slow mentation, memory impairment, attention deficits and dementia. Optic neuropathy occurs occasionally in adult patient. It is characterized by symmetric, painless and progressive visual loss. Parenteral replacement therapy should be started soon after the vitamin deficiency has been established.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2011

Increased Rate of Intracranial Saccular Aneurysms in Acromegaly: An MR Angiography Study and Review of the Literature

Renzo Manara; Pietro Maffei; Valentina Citton; Silvia Rizzati; Giulia Bommarito; Mario Ermani; Irene Albano; Alessandro Della Puppa; Carla Carollo; Giacomo Pavesi; Massimo Scanarini; Filippo Ceccato; Nicola Sicolo; Franco Mantero; Carla Scaroni; Chiara Martini

BACKGROUND The concurrence of intracranial aneurysms and acromegaly has been reported and debated previously. Our study in a large number of patients aimed to verify whether acromegaly patients carry a higher risk of harboring intracranial saccular aneurysms and to evaluate the possible relationship using clinical, laboratory, and imaging techniques. MATERIALS AND METHODS A total of 152 of 161 consecutive acromegaly patients (median age, 55.7 yr; 82 females) underwent neuroimaging evaluation of the circle of Willis. Clinical data (disease duration and disease control, hypertension, smoking history, diabetes and dyslipidemia, previous surgery or radiotherapy, previous or current pharmacological therapy), laboratory findings (GH and IGF-I at onset and shortly before examination), and pituitary adenoma imaging features (size and invasiveness of the cavernous sinus) were recorded. RESULTS Twenty-six patients (17.3%) harbored 40 newly diagnosed intracranial aneurysms; two other patients had previously undergone aneurysm clipping due to subarachnoid hemorrhage. Ten patients had multiple aneurysms; most of the aneurysms were located in the intracranial tract of the internal carotid artery (67.5%); no aneurysms belonged to the vertebrobasilar circulation. The presence of intracranial aneurysms correlated with GH serum values at disease onset (P < 0.05) and showed a trend to a positive correlation with poor disease control (P = 0.06); no other laboratory, clinical, and radiological findings correlated with the presence of intracranial aneurysms. CONCLUSIONS GH serum excess seems to carry an increased risk of developing intracranial aneurysms. A neuroradiological evaluation of the intracranial circulation might therefore be considered in the diagnostic work-up of patients affected with acromegaly.


American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2014

Brain Changes in Kallmann Syndrome

Renzo Manara; A. Salvalaggio; Angela Favaro; Vincenzo Palumbo; Valentina Citton; Andrea Elefante; Arturo Brunetti; F. Di Salle; Guglielmo Bonanni; Antonio Agostino Sinisi

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Kallmann syndrome is a rare inherited disorder due to defective intrauterine migration of olfactory axons and gonadotropin-releasing hormone neurons, leading to rhinencephalon hypoplasia and hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. Concomitant brain developmental abnormalities have been described. Our aim was to investigate Kallmann syndrome–related brain changes with conventional and novel quantitative MR imaging analyses. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Forty-five male patients with Kallmann syndrome (mean age, 30.7 years; range, 9–55 years) and 23 age-matched male controls underwent brain MR imaging. The MR imaging study protocol included 3D-T1, FLAIR, and diffusion tensor imaging (32 noncollinear gradient-encoding directions; b-value = 800 s/mm2). Voxel-based morphometry, sulcation, curvature, and cortical thickness analyses and tract-based spatial statistics were performed by using Statistical Parametric Mapping 8, FreeSurfer, and the fMRI of the Brain Software Library. RESULTS: Corpus callosum partial agenesis, multiple sclerosis–like white matter abnormalities, and acoustic schwannoma were found in 1 patient each. The total amount of gray and white matter volume and tract-based spatial statistics measures (fractional anisotropy and mean, radial, and axial diffusivity) did not differ between patients with Kallmann syndrome and controls. By specific analyses, patients with Kallmann syndrome presented with symmetric clusters of gray matter volume increase and decrease and white matter volume decrease close to the olfactory sulci; reduced sulcal depth of the olfactory sulci and deeper medial orbital-frontal sulci; lesser curvature of the olfactory sulcus and sharper curvature close to the medial orbital-frontal sulcus; and increased cortical thickness within the olfactory sulcus. CONCLUSIONS: This large MR imaging study on male patients with Kallmann syndrome featured significant morphologic and structural brain changes, likely driven by olfactory bulb hypo-/aplasia, selectively involving the basal forebrain cortex.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2010

Spinal Cord Infarction Due to Fibrocartilaginous Embolization: The Role of Diffusion Weighted Imaging and Short-Tau Inversion Recovery Sequences

Renzo Manara; Milena Calderone; Maria Savina Severino; Valentina Citton; Irene Toldo; Anna Maria Laverda; Stefano Sartori

Fibrocartilaginous embolization is a rare cause of ischemic myelopathy caused by embolization of intersomatic disk nucleus pulposus into spinal vasculature during Valsalva-like maneuvers. Diagnostic criteria are based on patient’s clinical history, magnetic resonance evidence of T2-hyperintense spinal cord lesion, and exclusion of other causes of ischemic myelopathy. These criteria do not take into account the development of magnetic resonance techniques able to enhance signal abnormalities within the neighboring intersomatic disc or vertebral body and to early characterize central nervous system lesions according to the presence of cytotoxic edema. We present 2 pediatric cases of progressive paraplegia attributed to fibrocartilaginous embolization in which short-tau inversion recovery and diffusion-weighted imaging sequences played a pivotal role showing the ischemic nature of spinal cord lesions. Due to its specificity, diffusion-weighted imaging should be included in the magnetic resonance criteria of fibrocartilaginous embolization and in standard magnetic resonance analysis when dealing with acute transverse myelopathy.


Neurological Sciences | 2012

Neurological complications in hyperemesis gravidarum

Gabriella Zara; Valentina Codemo; Arianna Palmieri; Sami Schiff; Annachiara Cagnin; Valentina Citton; Renzo Manara

Hyperemesis gravidarum can impair correct absorption of an adequate amount of thiamine and can cause electrolyte imbalance. This study investigated the neurological complications in a pregnant woman with hyperemesis gravidarum. A 29-year-old pregnant woman was admitted for hyperemesis gravidarum. Besides undernutrition, a neurological examination disclosed weakness with hyporeflexia, ophthalmoparesis, multidirectional nystagmus and optic disks swelling; the patient became rapidly comatose. Brain MRI showed symmetric signal hyperintensity and swelling of periaqueductal area, hypothalamus and mammillary bodies, medial and posterior portions of the thalamus and columns of fornix, consistent with Wernicke encephalopathy (WE). Neurophysiological studies revealed an axonal sensory-motor polyneuropathy, likely due to thiamine deficiency or critical illness polyneuropathy. Sodium and potassium supplementation and parenteral thiamine were administered with improvement of consciousness state in a few days. WE evolved in Korsakoff syndrome. A repeat MRI showed a marked improvement of WE-related alterations and a new hyperintense lesion in the pons, suggestive of central pontine myelinolysis. No sign or symptom due to involvement of the pons was present.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2012

Pachymeningeal involvement in POEMS syndrome: MRI and histopathological study

Chiara Briani; Marny Fedrigo; Renzo Manara; Chiara Castellani; Renato Zambello; Valentina Citton; Marta Campagnolo; Chiara Dalla Torre; Marta Lucchetta; Enrico Orvieto; Antonino Rotilio; Sabrina Marangoni; Stefania Magi; Davide Pareyson; Igor Florio; Elena Pegoraro; Gaetano Thiene; Leontino Battistin; Fausto Adami; Annalisa Angelini

Polyneuropathy, organomegaly, endocrinopathy, monoclonal gammopathy, skin changes (POEMS) syndrome is a rare plasma cell disease. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) seems to play a pathogenic role. Peripheral neuropathy is the main neurological feature. Cranial pachymeningitis has occasionally been reported, but no histopathological studies have been performed. The authors extensively evaluated the central nervous system MRI in 11 patients (seven men, four women; mean age at diagnosis 54.45 years) with POEMS syndrome. In two patients, meningeal histopathology with staining for VEGF and VEGF receptor was performed, and pachymeningeal involvement characterised at histopathological, immunohistochemical and confocal microscopy levels. Nine patients presented with cranial pachymeningitis. One patient suffered from migraine, and none complained of cranial nerve palsies or visual loss. None showed any MRI signs of spinal pachymeningitis. No correlation was found with disease duration and VEGF serum level. Histopathology showed hyperplasia of meningothelial cells, neovascularisation and obstructive vessel remodelling, without inflammation. VEGF and VEGF receptor were strongly coexpressed on endothelium, smooth-muscle cells of arterioles and meningothelial cells. In conclusion, POEMS patients present a high prevalence of meningeal involvement. The histological changes, different from those present in chronic pachymeningitis of other aetiology, suggest a possible VEGF role in the pathogenesis of the meningeal remodelling.


Insights Into Imaging | 2012

Apparent diffusion coefficient restriction in the white matter: going beyond acute brain territorial ischemia.

Valentina Citton; Alberto Burlina; Claudio Baracchini; Massimo Gallucci; Alessia Catalucci; Sandro Dal Pos; Alessandro P. Burlina; Renzo Manara

BackgroundReduction of apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values in white matter is not always ischaemic in nature.MethodsWe retrospectively analysed our MRI records featuring reduced ADC values in the centrum semiovale without grey matter involvement or significant vasogenic oedema.ResultsSeveral conditions showed the aforementioned MR findings: moose-horn lesions on coronal images in X-linked Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease; small fronto-parietal lesions in Menkes disease; marked signal abnormalities in the myelinised regions in the acute neonatal form of maple syrup urine disease; strip-like involvement of the corpus callosum in glutaric aciduria type 1; persistent periventricular parieto-occipital abnormalities in phenylketonuria; diffuse signal abnormalities with necrotic evolution in global cerebral anoxia or after heroin vapour inhalation; almost completely reversible symmetric fronto-parietal lesions in methotrexate neurotoxicity; chain-like lesions in watershed ischaemia; splenium involvement that normalises in reversible splenial lesions or leads to gliosis in diffuse axonal injury.ConclusionNeuroradiologists must be familiar with these features, thereby preventing misdiagnosis and inappropriate management.


Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases | 2013

Brain involvement in Alström syndrome

Valentina Citton; Angela Favaro; Vera Bettini; Joseph Gabrieli; Gabriella Milan; Nella Greggio; Jan D. Marshall; Jürgen K. Naggert; Renzo Manara; Pietro Maffei

BackgroundAlström Syndrome (AS) is a rare ciliopathy characterized by cone–rod retinal dystrophy, sensorineural hearing loss, obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus and cardiomyopathy. Most patients do not present with neurological issues and demonstrate normal intelligence, although delayed psychomotor development and psychiatric disorders have been reported. To date, brain Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) abnormalities in AS have not been explored.MethodsWe investigated structural brain changes in 12 genetically proven AS patients (mean-age 22 years; range: 6–45, 6 females) and 19 matched healthy and positive controls (mean-age 23 years; range: 6–43; 12 females) using conventional MRI, Voxel-Based Morphometry (VBM) and Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI).Results6/12 AS patients presented with brain abnormalities such as ventricular enlargement (4/12), periventricular white matter abnormalities (3/12) and lacune-like lesions (1/12); all patients older than 30 years had vascular-like lesions. VBM detected grey and white matter volume reduction in AS patients, especially in the posterior regions. DTI revealed significant fractional anisotropy decrease and radial diffusivity increase in the supratentorial white matter, also diffusely involving those regions that appeared normal on conventional imaging. On the contrary, axial and mean diffusivity did not differ from controls except in the fornix.ConclusionsBrain involvement in Alström syndrome is not uncommon. Early vascular-like lesions, gray and white matter atrophy, mostly involving the posterior regions, and diffuse supratentorial white matter derangement suggest a role of cilia in endothelial cell and oligodendrocyte function.


Neurology | 2011

Spinal subtraction MRI for diagnosis of epidural leakage in SIH

Nicola Bonetto; Renzo Manara; Valentina Citton; Annachiara Cagnin

Objective: To explore the efficacy of spinal MRI study with subtraction analysis as a rapid, reliable, and noninvasive procedure to detect epidural CSF collection in spontaneous intracranial hypotension (SIH) syndrome. Methods: Seventeen patients (mean age 42 years, age range 17–65 years; 11 female) with SIH diagnosed using the International Classification of Headache Disorders criteria and 13 age-matched control subjects underwent standard sagittal spinal MRI. Postprocessing image analysis with subtraction of T1-weighted from T2-weighted MRI scans was performed and tested for the detection of the CSF leak. Results: The CSF epidural collection was visible in all patients with SIH and was detected at the dorsal (16 of 17), cervical (13 of 17), lumbar (13 of 17), and sacral (12 of 17) levels. None of the control subjects showed a CSF leak. Diverticula were present in 23% of patients, whereas the actual site of the CSF leak was recognized in only one patient. Eight patients were treated conservatively, whereas 9 patients required an epidural blood patch, performed at a fixed L2–L3 or L3–L4 spinal level, with complete recovery. Conclusions: Spinal MRI with dedicated subtraction analysis could represent the first-line diagnostic tool in the management of patients with SIH, thus leaving invasive investigation for selected patients, such those requiring dural surgery.

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