Creatinine concentration in 24-h urine has been proposed as an indirect measure of body skeletal muscle mass (SMM). We attempted to correlate urinary creatinine levels with SMM in eight patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a... more
Creatinine concentration in 24-h urine has been proposed as an indirect measure of body skeletal muscle mass (SMM). We attempted to correlate urinary creatinine levels with SMM in eight patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a progressive disease in which the degree of muscle wasting parallels the rate of progression. Magnetic resonance imaging and a newly developed protocol for image analysis
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Research Interests:
We report the spectrum of muscle involvement on magnetic resonance imaging in 11 patients with a molecularly confirmed diagnosis of adult-onset acid maltase deficiency at different clinical stages. Muscle magnetic resonance imaging showed... more
We report the spectrum of muscle involvement on magnetic resonance imaging in 11 patients with a molecularly confirmed diagnosis of adult-onset acid maltase deficiency at different clinical stages. Muscle magnetic resonance imaging showed a selective progressive pattern of muscle involvement with a constant involvement of the adductor magnus and semimembranosus at the early stage of the disease and a later fatty infiltration of the long head of the biceps femoris, semitendinosus and of the anterior thigh muscles. In the advanced phases a selective sparing of sartorius, rectus, and gracilis muscles and peripheral portions of the vastus lateralis was also evident. Muscle strength and magnetic resonance imaging findings were positively correlated. The results suggest that muscle magnetic resonance imaging may provide valuable diagnostic guidance for the assessment of accurate selective muscular involvement in acid maltase deficiency and may help monitor the progression of the disorder. Further control studies in a larger cohort are needed to evaluate the specificity of these findings.
Research Interests: Skeletal muscle biology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Muscle strength, Humans, Female, and 17 moreMale, Differential Diagnosis, Medical Physiology, Clinical Sciences, Middle Aged, Spectrum, Adult, Neuromuscular Disorders, Leg, Disease Progression, Cross Sectional Studies, Thigh, Neuromuscular, Biceps Femoris, Neurosciences, Predictive value of tests, and Age of Onset
Eight patients with adult-onset type II glycogenosis (GSD II), all carrying the IVS1-13T<G mutation, were treated with high-protein isocaloric diet... more
Eight patients with adult-onset type II glycogenosis (GSD II), all carrying the IVS1-13T<G mutation, were treated with high-protein isocaloric diet for 3 years. We evaluated the usefulness of this approach through the assessment of the skeletal muscles (by manual muscle testing, quantitative isokinetic exercise, and muscle MRI) and the respiratory function (by spirometry). Three patients with mild or moderate disease severity refused the diet and were still monitored for comparison: they showed clinical (2 patients) or clinicoradiological (1 patient) progression of muscle weakness, while respiratory function remained unchanged. Among the patients accepting the dietary treatment, muscle strength remained unchanged, as did the degree of fatty infiltration and atrophy as assessed by muscle MRI; respiratory function worsened in 2/5 patients with severe baseline respiratory dysfunction. High-protein diet may stabilize disease progression at the skeletal muscles, but does not produce significant clinical improvements; moreover, the usefulness of this approach in patients with severe respiratory disease seems questionable.
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Spinal cord calcifications are an unusual finding in pediatric neurology. We here describe a young child who presented severe psychomotor delay, tetraplegia, deafness, and anemia. Neuroradiological investigations revealed severe... more
Spinal cord calcifications are an unusual finding in pediatric neurology. We here describe a young child who presented severe psychomotor delay, tetraplegia, deafness, and anemia. Neuroradiological investigations revealed severe leukodystrophy and unusual calcifications in the cerebral white matter and all along the medullary pathways. Common infectious and metabolic diseases were ruled out. A mild reduction in the activity of several respiratory chain complexes was documented on muscle biopsy. Of interest, we found an intronic variant in DARS2, a gene involved in mitochondrial DNA translation, responsible for the syndrome of leukoencephalopathy with brainstem and spinal cord involvement and high brain lactate. In our opinion, our case, and probably 2 previously reported Japanese siblings with a picture very similar to that of our patient, could represent a new, progressive leukoencephalomyelopathy.
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Alien hand syndrome is a rare neurological disorder characterized by involuntary and uncontrollable motor behaviour, usually of an arm or hand. The patient perceives the affected limb as alien, and may personify it. The case of a... more
Alien hand syndrome is a rare neurological disorder characterized by involuntary and uncontrollable motor behaviour, usually of an arm or hand. The patient perceives the affected limb as alien, and may personify it. The case of a 61-year-old right-handed woman who developed right posterior AHS after ischaemic stroke in the left posterior cerebral artery territory is reported. Neuroimaging studies disclosed no frontal or parietal involvement, while a posterior thalamic lesion was detected. A possible role of the thalamus in the genesis of AHS is discussed.
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Abnormal postures of the trunk are a typical feature of Parkinson's disease (PD). These include Pisa syndrome (PS), a tonic lateral flexion of the trunk associated with slight rotation along the sagittal plane. In this study we... more
Abnormal postures of the trunk are a typical feature of Parkinson's disease (PD). These include Pisa syndrome (PS), a tonic lateral flexion of the trunk associated with slight rotation along the sagittal plane. In this study we describe clinical, electromyographic (EMG), and radiological features of PS in a group of 20 PD patients. All patients with trunk deviation underwent EMG and radiological (RX and CT scan) investigation. Clinical characteristics of patients with PS were compared with a control group of PD patients without trunk deviation. PD patients with PS showed a significantly higher score of disease asymmetry compared with the control group. In the majority of patients with PS, trunk bending was contralateral to the side of symptom onset. EMG showed abnormal tonic hyperactivity on the side of the deviation in the paravertebral thoracic muscles and in the abdominal oblique muscles. CT of the lumbar paraspinal muscles showed muscular atrophy more marked on the side of ...