CARLOTTA DI DOMENICO

Dottoressa di ricerca

ciclo: XXXV



Titolo della tesi: “Verbal and visual dissociation in retrieval practice paradigm in neurodegenerative diseases.”

As is well known, prefrontal functions assert the control of inhibition for the retrieval of semantically related elements that lead to forgetfulness. The aim of this study is to document any verbal and visual dissociation in the RIF. In particular, we want to test the hypothesis that representations in long-term visual memory are sufficiently rooted to be immune to impairment based on recognition, unlike oblivion induced by the retrieval of verbal material. The aim of this project is also to investigate which brain areas are most involved in the processes of inhibition and facilitation in patients with different types of cognitive impairment. To do this, 21 AD patients, 21 MCI patients, 16 SCD and 23 HS were enrolled. All participants underwent an extensive neuropsychological evaluation by ACE-R and the Retrieval Practice Paradigm (RPP), with an experimental recognition task, where the same items were presented both in visual and verbal form in order to calculate, at a group level, the RIF and FAC effects. Only subjects who did not have contraindications to perform MRI, (14 AD, 16 MCI, 14 SCD and 18 HS) underwent 3 T-MRI scanning including a T1-w volume. Voxel-based morphometry (VBM) was used to assess associations between grey matter (GM) volumetrics and RPP indices (Nrp, RP +, Rp-) in each group separately. ANOVA models were used to assess cross-sectional differences in all neuropsychological measures and experimental conditions and effects. In each of the 4 groups, separately, Pearson's correlations were used to assess potential association between each domain of ACE-R and the three RPP indices (Nrp, RP +, Rp-). Regarding the results about the RPP indices (Nrp, RP +, Rp-), for the verbal task, we observed a significant between-group difference in Nrp items. Post-hoc showed that the proportion of items in the Nrp condition is statistically higher in HS group than AD group. Moreover, we found a significant effect of group in Rp+ items: post-hoc revealed a significant difference between AD and SCD and between AD and HS. Interestingly, the tendency of significance was present on the comparison between AD and MCI. No significant differences were observed between MCI and SCD and between MCI and HS. Similarly, HS and SCD groups showed comparable performance on Rp+ items. Regarding the RPP effects (RIF and FAC), we observed a significant main effect of group in the FAC effect. Post-hoc revealed significant a main effect of group due to the fact that AD recognized less items than SCD and HS, respetively. We found also a significant main effect of Condition, because the proportion of items retrieved in the Rp+ condition is statistically higher than that retrieved in the Nrp condition in all groups. Finally, we found no significant Group by Condition interaction indicating that the FAC effect was present in all considered groups. Finally, regarding the RIF effect, we observed a significant main effect of group, due to a significant difference exclusively between AD and HS groups; we revealed no significant effect of condition: indeed, in this case the means of item retrieved in two conditions Nrp and Rp- were almost the same. Finally, we found a significant Group by Condition interaction. The planned comparisons showed that the RIF effect was present in the SCD group only, but no RIF effect was observed in AD, in MCI and HS groups. For the visual task, no significant differences were observed between groups in the accuracy of the Nrp items, RP+ items, RP- items. As regards the FAC effect, we observed a significant main effect of group, due to a significant difference exclusively in the recognition of the global accuracy between AD and HS groups. We found also a significant main effect of Condition: in this case, the Rp+ items were better recalled than Nrp items in all groups. Finally, we observed no significant Group by Condition interaction, indicating that the FAC effect was present in all groups. Furthermore, about the RIF effect, in the verbal task, we observed no significant main effect of group, but significant main effect of Condition, since the Nrp items were better remembered than Rp- items. Moreover, we found no significant Group by Condition interaction: in this case, the planned comparisons revealed that the RIF effect was present in the SCD only. Comparing the groups individually, no significant dissociation emerged between two tasks, verbal and visual. There is only a tendency in SCD, due to greater accuracy of subjects who performed the verbal task, compared to those who performed the visual task, in the Rp- condition. For the MRI analysis results, in the Verbal task, VBM results showed in AD patients, revealed a positive association between Rp- items and GM volumes in the Right Putamen, Cingulus Gyrus and Left Putamen. In the Visual task the VBM analyses, revealed in AD patients a positive association between Nrp items and GM volumes in the Middle Frontal Gyrus, Inferior Frontal Gyrus, pars triangularis and Insular Cortex. Moreover, in SCD subjects, a significant positive association were found between Rp- items and GM volumes in the Postcentral Gyrus, Supramarginal Gyrus, Superior Frontal Gyrus, and Precuneous Cortex, bilaterally. In conclusion, in our study, in line with other experiments (Hogge et al., 2008; Saunders and Summers., 2011; Traykov et al., 2011; Ortega et al., 2012; Serra et al., 2022), shows the presence of an inhibitory effect: the RIF is not evident in the pathological group of AD and MCI, but not even in healthy subjects, which generally show good inhibition capacity; this result could be because the recognition task was too simple for healthy subjects, who were able to recall multiple items without distinction. Although there is a trend, in both tasks, in favor of a RIF effect as the pathology increases. We can also hypothesize that the worse performance observed in the RIF obtained from patients is not a direct expression of an inhibitory deficit but could depend on a general deficit of episodic long-term memory processes.

Produzione scientifica

11573/1696763 - 2023 - Preclinical brain network abnormalities in patients with subjective cognitive decline
Serra, Laura; Bonarota, Sabrina; Di Domenico, Carlotta; Caruso, Giulia; Giulietti, Giovanni; Caltagirone, Carlo; Cercignani, Mara; Bozzali, Marco - 01a Articolo in rivista
rivista: JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE (Netherlands: IOS Press) pp. 1119-1131 - issn: 1387-2877 - wos: WOS:001079395900026 (0) - scopus: 2-s2.0-85174039312 (0)

11573/1670292 - 2022 - Cognitive reserve modulates brain structure and cortical architecture in the alzheimer's disease
Serra, Laura; Giancaterino, Giulia; Giulietti, Giovanni; Petrosini, Laura; Di Domenico, Carlotta; Marra, Camillo; Caltagirone, Carlo; Bassi, Andrea; Cercignani, Mara; Bozzali, Marco - 01a Articolo in rivista
rivista: JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE (Netherlands: IOS Press) pp. 811-824 - issn: 1387-2877 - wos: WOS:000862907100006 (2) - scopus: 2-s2.0-85139535824 (2)

11573/1622379 - 2021 - "Ventral tegmental area disconnection contributes two years early to correctly classify patients converted to alzheimer's disease: Implications for treatment
Serra, L.; D'amelio, M.; Esposito, S.; Di Domenico, C.; Koch, G.; Marra, C.; Mercuri, N. B.; Caltagirone, C.; Artusi, C. A.; Lopiano, L.; Cercignani, M.; Bozzali, M. - 01a Articolo in rivista
rivista: JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE (Netherlands: IOS Press) pp. 985-1000 - issn: 1387-2877 - wos: WOS:000683026700011 (14) - scopus: 2-s2.0-85112052457 (14)

11573/1384990 - 2020 - Cerebellar dentate nucleus functional connectivity with cerebral cortex in Alzheimer's disease and memory: a seed-based approach
Olivito, G; Serra, L; Marra, C; Di Domenico, C; Caltagirone, C; Toniolo, S; Cercignani, M; Leggio, M; Bozzali, M - 01a Articolo in rivista
rivista: NEUROBIOLOGY OF AGING (Elsevier Science Incorporated / NY Journals:Madison Square Station, PO Box 882:New York, NY 10159:(212)633-3730, EMAIL: usinfo-f@elsevier.com, INTERNET: http://www.elsevier.com, Fax: (212)633-3680) pp. 32-40 - issn: 0197-4580 - wos: WOS:000522552900004 (32) - scopus: 2-s2.0-85079810097 (32)

11573/1670317 - 2020 - Abnormal cortical thickness is associated with deficits in social cognition in patients with myotonic dystrophy type 1
Serra, Laura; Bianchi, Guendalina; Bruschini, Michela; Giulietti, Giovanni; Domenico, Carlotta Di; Bonarota, Sabrina; Petrucci, Antonio; Silvestri, Gabriella; Perna, Alessia; Meola, Giovanni; Caltagirone, Carlo; Bozzali, Marco - 01a Articolo in rivista
rivista: FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY (Lausanne: Frontiers Research Foundation, 2010-) pp. 1-10 - issn: 1664-2295 - wos: WOS:000524569200001 (21) - scopus: 2-s2.0-85082554242 (19)

11573/1489222 - 2019 - Testing for the myth of cognitive reserve. Are the static and dynamic cognitive reserve indexes a representation of different reserve warehouses?
Serra, L.; Petrosini, L.; Salaris, A.; Pica, L.; Bruschini, M.; Di Domenico, C.; Caltagirone, C.; Marra, C.; Bozzali, M. - 01a Articolo in rivista
rivista: JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE (Netherlands: IOS Press) pp. 111-126 - issn: 1387-2877 - wos: WOS:000500780700010 (7) - scopus: 2-s2.0-85074422842 (8)

11573/1279616 - 2019 - Thalamocortical disconnection affects the somatic marker and social cognition. A case report
Serra, Laura; Bruschini, Michela; Ottaviani, Cristina; Di Domenico, Carlotta; Fadda, Lucia; Caltagirone, Carlo; Cercignani, Mara; Carlesimo, Giovanni Augusto; Bozzali, Marco - 01a Articolo in rivista
rivista: NEUROCASE (Oxford University Press:Journals Department, Great Clarendon Street, Oxford OX2 6DP United Kingdom:011 44 1865 556767, EMAIL: jnlorders@oup.co.uk, INTERNET: http://www.oup.co.uk, Fax: 011 44 1865 267485) pp. 1-9 - issn: 1355-4794 - wos: WOS:000465718700001 (3) - scopus: 2-s2.0-85063636957 (3)

11573/1162071 - 2018 - Rethinking the reserve with a translational approach: novel ideas on the construct and the interventions
Serra, L; Gelfo, F; Petrosini, L; Di Domenico, C; Bozzali, M; Caltagirone, C - 01a Articolo in rivista
rivista: JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE (Netherlands: IOS Press) pp. 1065-1078 - issn: 1387-2877 - wos: WOS:000445487700002 (20) - scopus: 2-s2.0-85054132366 (19)

11573/1670336 - 2017 - Network-based substrate of cognitive reserve in alzheimer's disease
Serra, Laura; Mancini, Matteo; Cercignani, Mara; Di Domenico, Carlotta; Spanò, Barbara; Giulietti, Giovanni; Koch, Giacomo; Marra, Camillo; Bozzali, Marco - 01a Articolo in rivista
rivista: JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE (Netherlands: IOS Press) pp. 421-430 - issn: 1387-2877 - wos: WOS:000387671600033 (42) - scopus: 2-s2.0-84994593619 (45)

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