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Institution

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

EducationMilan, Lombardia, Italy
About: Catholic University of the Sacred Heart is a education organization based out in Milan, Lombardia, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 13592 authors who have published 31048 publications receiving 853961 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The differential effect of scopolamine on motor responses evoked by magnetic and electrical stimulation of the motor cortex and the selective effect on somatosensory inhibition demonstrate that muscarinic blockade modifies the excitability of specific cortical networks in the human motor cortex.
Abstract: The aim of the present study was to investigate whether muscarinic receptor blockade with scopolamine modifies the excitability of specific cortical networks of the human motor cortex as tested with transcranial magnetic stimulation. The effects of scopolamine on the excitability of human motor cortex were investigated in four healthy subjects using transcranial magnetic stimulation before and after an intravenous dose of scopolamine (0.006 mg/kg). We measured the threshold for motor responses, amplitude of motor responses, the duration of the cortical silent period, intracortical inhibition and facilitation, and short-latency inhibition produced by somatosensory input from the hand. In addition, we evaluated the amplitude of motor responses evoked by electrical anodal stimulation, since these responses originate from direct activation of corticospinal axons in the white matter and are not sensitive to changes in cortical excitability. Scopolamine decreased the threshold to magnetic stimuli and increased the amplitude of motor responses evoked by magnetic stimulation. In contrast, motor responses evoked by electrical stimulation were unaffected by administration of scopolamine. Scopolamine also led to a highly significant reduction in the amount of short-latency inhibition produced by somatosensory input from the hand. In contrast, short-latency intracortical inhibition and facilitation were not modified by scopolamine. The differential effect of scopolamine on motor responses evoked by magnetic and electrical stimulation of the motor cortex and the selective effect on somatosensory inhibition demonstrate that muscarinic blockade modifies the excitability of specific cortical networks in the human motor cortex.

334 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Exact schedulability conditions are presented for three packet scheduling methods: earliest-deadline-first (EDF), static-priority (SP), and a novel scheduling method, referred to as rotating-priority-queues (RPQ), by characterizing the worst-case traffic with general subadditive functions, which can be applied to a large class of traffic models.
Abstract: To support the requirements for the transmission of continuous media, such as audio and video, multiservice packet-switching networks must provide service guarantees to connections, including guarantees on throughput, network delays, and network delay variations. For the most demanding applications, the network must offer a service which provides deterministically bounded delay guarantees, referred to as "bounded delay service." The admission control functions in a network with a bounded delay service require 'schedulability conditions' that detect violations of delay guarantees in a network switch. Exact schedulability conditions are presented for three packet scheduling methods: earliest-deadline-first (EDF), static-priority (SP), and a novel scheduling method, referred to as rotating-priority-queues (RPQ). By characterizing the worst-case traffic with general subadditive functions, the presented schedulability conditions can be applied to a large class of traffic models. Examples, which include actual MPEG video traces, are presented to demonstrate the trade-offs involved in selecting a packet scheduling method for a bounded delay service.

334 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These Guidelines have been a big effort of SOSORT to paint the actual situation of CTIS, starting from the evidence, and filling all the gray areas using a scientific method, and it is possible to understand the lack of research in general on CTIS.
Abstract: The International Scientific Society on Scoliosis Orthopaedic and Rehabilitation Treatment (SOSORT), that produced its first Guidelines in 2005, felt the need to revise them and increase their scientific quality. The aim is to offer to all professionals and their patients an evidence-based updated review of the actual evidence on conservative treatment of idiopathic scoliosis (CTIS). All types of professionals (specialty physicians, and allied health professionals) engaged in CTIS have been involved together with a methodologist and a patient representative. A review of all the relevant literature and of the existing Guidelines have been performed. Documents, recommendations, and practical approach flow charts have been developed according to a Delphi procedure. A methodological and practical review has been made, and a final Consensus Session was held during the 2011 Barcelona SOSORT Meeting. The contents of the document are: methodology; generalities on idiopathic scoliosis; approach to CTIS in different patients, with practical flow-charts; literature review and recommendations on assessment, bracing, physiotherapy, Physiotherapeutic Specific Exercises (PSE) and other CTIS. Sixty-five recommendations have been given, divided in the following topics: Bracing (20 recommendations), PSE to prevent scoliosis progression during growth (8), PSE during brace treatment and surgical therapy (5), Other conservative treatments (3), Respiratory function and exercises (3), Sports activities (6), Assessment (20). No recommendations reached a Strength of Evidence level I; 2 were level II; 7 level III; and 20 level IV; through the Consensus procedure 26 reached level V and 10 level VI. The Strength of Recommendations was Grade A for 13, B for 49 and C for 3; none had grade D. These Guidelines have been a big effort of SOSORT to paint the actual situation of CTIS, starting from the evidence, and filling all the gray areas using a scientific method. According to results, it is possible to understand the lack of research in general on CTIS. SOSORT invites researchers to join, and clinicians to develop good research strategies to allow in the future to support or refute these recommendations according to new and stronger evidence.

334 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A network organization based on preemptive patient centralization allowed a high survival rate and provided effective and safe referral of patients with severe H1N1-suspected ARDS.
Abstract: Purpose In view of the expected 2009 influenza A(H1N1) pandemic, the Italian Health Authorities set up a national referral network of selected intensive care units (ICU) able to provide advanced respiratory care up to extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) for patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). We describe the organization and results of the network, known as ECMOnet.

333 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Oct 1997-Brain
TL;DR: Cerebellar lesions induce specific impairment in the procedural learning of a motor sequence and suggest a role of the cerebellar circuitry in detecting and recognizing event sequences.
Abstract: The aim of the present study was to investigate the influence of focal cerebellar lesions on procedural learning. Eight patients with cerebellar lesions and six control subjects were tested in a serial reaction-time task. A four-choice reaction-time task was employed in which the stimuli followed (or not) a sequence repeated 10 times, with the subjects aware (or not) of the item sequence. Learning was manifested by the reduction in response latency over the sequential blocks. Acquisition of declarative knowledge of the sequence was also tested. Reaction times displayed by patients with cerebellar lesions, even though they tended to be longer than those of control subjects in all testing conditions, significantly differed from control subjects only when the stimuli were presented in sequence. The reaction times in sequential trials were still statistically significant when simple motor response times were taken into account. Cerebellar patients were also significantly impaired in detecting and repeating the sequence. On the other hand, when the sequence was learned before testing, motor performances were significantly improved in all subjects. These data indicate that cerebellar lesions induce specific impairment in the procedural learning of a motor sequence and suggest a role of the cerebellar circuitry in detecting and recognizing event sequences.

333 citations


Authors

Showing all 13795 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Peter J. Barnes1941530166618
Cornelia M. van Duijn1831030146009
Dennis R. Burton16468390959
Paolo Boffetta148145593876
Massimo Antonelli130127279319
David B. Audretsch12667172456
Piero Anversa11541260220
Marco Pahor11247646549
David L. Paterson11173968485
Alfonso Caramazza10845139280
Anthony A. Amato10591157881
Stefano Pileri10063543369
Giovanni Gasbarrini9889436395
Giampaolo Merlini9668440324
Silvio Donato9686041166
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023106
2022276
20213,228
20202,935
20192,170
20181,907