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3.
Int J Colorectal Dis ; 13(1): 21-6, 1998.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9548096

ABSTRACT

The study investigated the relationship between anal canal size and anal canal pressure measured simultaneously by anal endosonography and an electronic pressure probe. Twelve normal subjects were studied. Anal endosonography was performed using a 7.5-Mhz rotating transducer of 2-5 cm focal length covered with a sylastic balloon filled with degassed water (25 ml). During anal endosonography an electronic manometric probe was passed along the side of the probe and positioned in the anal canal. The ultrasonic image was frozen when maximal anal pressure was seen at basal, squeeze, and minimal pressure during straining. An image was also obtained at maximal anal relaxation after rectal distension with a balloon filled with 150 ml air. The results showed that anal canal pressure was significantly and linearly correlated with anal canal diameter (P < 0.001).


Subject(s)
Anal Canal/diagnostic imaging , Anal Canal/physiology , Endosonography , Manometry , Humans , Pressure
4.
Ital J Neurol Sci ; Suppl 5: 67-72, 1986 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3759411

ABSTRACT

We discuss the methodological implications of research into the newborn's response to cuddling, that is cuddliness, an item on the Brazelton NBAS scale. After analyzing its dimension as an interaction cycle, we describe an investigation into cuddliness in 52 newborns aged 0 to 3 hours before they had been fed or presented to their mothers. We report on the behavioral changes that proved to be most significant both for postural sequence and for involvement of the partner. These data are correlated with the variations in level of alertness observed during the maneuvers and characterizing the course of the interaction, which started in the quiet awake state (level 3-4) and ended with the transition either to sleepiness or to tension.


Subject(s)
Child Development , Infant, Newborn/psychology , Interpersonal Relations , Arousal , Humans , Mouth/physiology , Periodicity , Posture , Time Factors
6.
Riv Patol Nerv Ment ; 98(4): 233-58, 1978 Sep.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-741172

ABSTRACT

Frontal and vertex CNVs were studied in 8 selected nonschizophrenic patients subjected to unilateral or bilateral extensive prefrontal lobotomy. The dorsomedial thalamo-frontal pathways had been severed and their regeneration must be considered impossible. Standard CNV task (S1-S2-R) was followed in order to elicit CNVs from the frontal areas anterior to the line of sections and at Cz. In 7 out of 8 patients it was quite easy to evoke CNV with almost normal features and equal latencies in each case from all the cortical areas explored. These results show that CNV formation is not grossly altered in the prefrontal areas which have been irreversibly deprived of normal bi-directional mediothalamic-frontocortical connnections. This suggests that the role of the dorsomedial thalamo-frontal pathways are not essential in the genesis of the frontal CNV in humans. These findings would suggest that the CNV is a diffuse electrical event essentially related to a unitary cerebral process mediated fundamentally by nonspecific ascending meso-diencephalic reticular systems. The differences in morphology and polarity of the CNVs detectable in various brain structures are presumably related to their intrinsic anatomo-functional characteristics and to the method commonly utilized in recording the CNV.


Subject(s)
Contingent Negative Variation , Electrophysiology , Neural Pathways/physiology , Psychosurgery , Adult , Aged , Electroencephalography , Female , Frontal Lobe , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
7.
Riv Patol Nerv Ment ; 98(2): 119-32, 1977.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-616013

ABSTRACT

Two cases have been studied by means of the usual method for eliciting CNV (S-1.5 OR 1 SEC-S-operant response) during and after the end of an episode of prolonged epileptic twilight state with almost continuous strictly unilateral temporal lobe discharge. From the clinical viewpoint in both cases the twilight state, lasting respectively about 12 and 48 hours, was characterized by a slightly clouded consciousness and moderate impairment of awareness and of psychic performances, at times associated with simple and complex psychomotor automatism and hallucinations. The EEG recorded an almost continous left temporal discharge of pseudorhythmic mixed slow waves and sharps. The third case had typical prolonged petit mal states with continuous spike-and-slow-wave activity, impaired intellectual and motor performances (very long reaction time etc.). In this patient for eliciting ERSPs, besides the standard method, we have used a paradigm in which S consisted of a colored slide, with various semantic contents, remaining visible for 5 seconds on a screen. At the trials of the standard paradigm during the epiliptic twilight state, all patients showed they had understood the signal to interrupt (S loud repetitive tone) in the shortest time possible and could clearly distinguish them from the S. The operant response was almost always made with sufficient precision and sometimes with fairly short reaction time, especially by the patients with temporal psychomotor status. During the episodes of prolonged clouded consciosness in all series of trials administered to the patients, no negative slow potential shifts were observed in the averaged EEG recordings obtained from F-T, F-T or F, FCZ and referred to to linked mastoids. On repetition of the examinations some time after the end of the epileptic twilight state, fairly normal ERSPs were obtained in all cases. Taking also into account the results of previous researches, these studies show that the temporal lobe and "centrencephalic" epileptic discharges, under certain conditions, may influence negatively the neurophysiological mechanisms which contribute to the information of complex contingent connections and which also underly the particular attentional, cognitive and sensorimotor functions involved in the inhibiting the appearance of ERSPs probably related to more specific perceptual and integrative functions. Some AA. maintain that negative slow potential shifts express the functional activity of the brain structures, particularly of determined cerebral cortex regions, involved not only in attentional, perceptual, cognitive and psychomotor functioning, but also in information processing (memory recording mechanism). Hence, the negative influence of prolonged temporal lobe or meso-diencephalic epileptic discharges on these structures may explain the almost complete amnesia that patients generally show at the termination of this kind of twilight state.


Subject(s)
Electroencephalography , Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe/physiopathology , Status Epilepticus/physiopathology , Adult , Child , Female , Humans , Male
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