80 results on '"Collantoni E"'
Search Results
2. Persistent avoidance of virtual food in anorexia nervosa-restrictive type: Results from motion tracking in a virtual stopping task
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Schroeder, P. A., Collantoni, E., Meregalli, V., Rabarbari, Elisa, Simonazzi, C., Svaldi, J., Cardi, V., Rabarbari E. (ORCID:0009-0008-3724-7337), Schroeder, P. A., Collantoni, E., Meregalli, V., Rabarbari, Elisa, Simonazzi, C., Svaldi, J., Cardi, V., and Rabarbari E. (ORCID:0009-0008-3724-7337)
- Abstract
Objective: Food avoidance is central to patients with anorexia nervosa-restrictive type (AN-R). Competing accounts in experimental psychopathology research suggest that food avoidance may result from automatic, habitual responses or from elevated inhibitory control abilities. This study investigated behavioral trajectories of food avoidance in a novel virtual reality stopping task. Method: Sixty patients with AN-R and 29 healthy controls with normal weight were investigated using a novel, kinematic task in virtual reality. We recorded spatial displacement in stop- and go-trials to virtual food and control objects. Inhibitory control abilities were operationalized by the VR task in stopping performance (i.e., interrupted movement in stop-trials), whereas we also measured habitual avoidance of virtual food across both go- and stop-trials (i.e., delayed movement relative to nonfood objects). Results: In patients with AN-R, hand displacements were shorter to food versus nonfood across stop- and go-trials, reflected in a Stimulus × Group interaction. Healthy controls showed no differences. Importantly, the food-specific effect in AN-R was identical across stop- and go-trials, indicating habitual food avoidance. Moreover, stop error rates (i.e., stop-trials with response) were lower in patients with AN-R. Discussion: The findings suggest food-specific habitual avoidance and heightened generalized inhibitory control in AN-R. The continuously delayed displacements during active hand movements across stop- and go-trials indicated the persistence of patients' avoidance of food. Public Significance: Experimental research investigates the mechanisms underlying mental disorders such as anorexia nervosa. In this study, we measured interrupted hand movements in response to food pictures or neutral pictures (shoes) in patients with anorexia nervosa and healthy controls. A virtual reality scenario was used. Findings indicated that patients were slower at approaching food, interrupte
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- 2024
3. Motor insensitivity to food as a potential mechanism contributing to calorie restriction in anorexia nervosa: a mobile approach-avoidance task
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Meregalli, V., Ambrosini, E., Cardi, V., Tenconi, E., Meneguzzo, P., Favaro, A., and Collantoni, E.
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- 2024
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4. Genome-wide association study detected novel susceptibility genes for social cognition impairment in people with schizophrenia
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Gennarelli, M., Monteleone, P., Minelli, A., Monteleone, A. M., Rossi, A., Rocca, P., Bertolino, A., Aguglia, E., Amore, M., Bellino, S., Bellomo, A., Biondi, M., Bucci, P., Carpiniello, B., Cascino, G., Cuomo, A., Dell'Osso, L., di Giannantonio, M., Giordano, G. M., Marchesi, C., Oldani, L., Pompili, M., Roncone, R., Rossi, R., Siracusano, A., Tenconi, E., Vita, A., Zeppegno, P., Galderisi, S., Maj, M., Corrivetti, G., Del Buono, G., Torretta, S., Calia, V., Raio, A., Barlati, S., Deste, G., Magri, C., Valsecchi, P., Pinna, F., Muscas, M., Marras, L., Piegari, G., Giuliani, L., Brando, F., Coccia, C., Concerto, C., Poli, L. F., Surace, T., Martinotti, G., Pettorruso, M., Fraticelli, S., Altamura, M., Pasquale Tortorelli, F. M., Mollica, A., Calcagno, P., Murri, M. B., Serafini, G., Pacitti, F., Socci, V., Lucaselli, A., Giusti, L., Mammarella, S., Bianchini, V., Gramaglia, C., Gambaro, E., Martelli, M., Favaro, A., Meneguzzo, P., Collantoni, E., Tonna, M., Ossola, P., Gerra, M. L., Carmassi, C., Carpita, B., Cremone, I. M., Comparelli, A., Brugnoli, R., Corigliano, V., Fagiolini, A., Bolognesi, S., Goracci, A., Di Lorenzo, G., Ribolsi, M., Niolu, C., Bozzatello, P., Brasso, C., Montemagni, C., Buzzanca, A., Di Fabio, F., Girardi, N., Gennarelli, Massimo, Monteleone, Palmiero, Minelli, Alessandra, Monteleone, Alessio Maria, Rossi, Alessandro, Rocca, Paola, Bertolino, Alessandro, Aguglia, Eugenio, Amore, Mario, Bellino, Silvio, Bellomo, Antonello, Biondi, Massimo, Bucci, Paola, Carpiniello, Bernardo, Cascino, Giammarco, Cuomo, Alessandro, Dell'Osso, Liliana, di Giannantonio, Massimo, Giordano, Giulia Maria, Marchesi, Carlo, Oldani, Lucio, Pompili, Maurizio, Roncone, Rita, Rossi, Rodolfo, Siracusano, Alberto, Tenconi, Elena, Vita, Antonio, Zeppegno, Patrizia, Galderisi, Silvana, and Maj, Mario
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Treatment outcome ,GWAS ,Social cognition ,TMEM74 ,meta-analysis ,schizophrenia ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Humans ,Membrane Proteins ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Schizophrenia ,Social Cognition ,Susceptibility gene ,Genome-wide association study ,Biology ,Affect (psychology) ,meta-analysi ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,SNP ,Polymorphism ,Biological Psychiatry ,Genetics ,Single Nucleotide ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Settore MED/25 ,Meta-analysis - Abstract
Objectives People with schizophrenia (SCZ) present serious and generalised deficits in social cognition (SC), which affect negatively patients' functioning and treatment outcomes. The genetic background of SC has been investigated in disorders other than SCZ providing weak and sparse results. Thus, our aim was to explore possible genetic correlates of SC dysfunctions in SCZ patients with a genome-wide study (GWAS) approach. Methods We performed a GWAS meta-analysis of data coming from two cohorts made of 242 and 160 SCZ patients, respectively. SC was assessed with different tools in order to cover its different domains. Results We found GWAS significant association between the TMEM74 gene and the patients' ability in social inference as assessed by The Awareness of Social Inference Test; this association was confirmed by both SNP-based analysis (lead SNP rs3019332 p-value = 5.24 × 10-9) and gene-based analysis (p-value = 1.09 × 10-7). Moreover, suggestive associations of other genes with different dimensions of SC were also found. Conclusions Our study shows for the first time GWAS significant or suggestive associations of some gene variants with SC domains in people with SCZ. These findings should stimulate further studies to characterise the genetic underpinning of SC dysfunctions in SCZ.
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- 2022
5. Prevalence of antipsychotic-induced extrapyramidal symptoms and their association with neurocognition and social cognition in outpatients with schizophrenia in the 'real-life'
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Monteleone, P., Cascino, G., Monteleone, A. M., Rocca, P., Rossi, A., Bertolino, A., Aguglia, E., Amore, M., Collantoni, E., Corrivetti, G., Cuomo, A., Bellomo, A., D'Ambrosio, E., Dell'Osso, L., Frascarelli, M., Giordano, G. M., Giuliani, L., Marchesi, C., Montemagni, C., Oldani, L., Pinna, F., Pompili, M., Roncone, R., Rossi, R., Siracusano, A., Vita, A., Zeppegno, P., Galderisi, S., Maj, M., Del Buono, G., Marciello, F., Di Palo, P., Sangiuliano, M., Di Gioia, C., Barlati, S., Deste, G., Turrina, C., Carpiniello, B., Marras, L., Muscas, M., Bucci, P., Piegari, G., Brando, F., Aiello, C., Poli, L. F., Saitta, G., Surace, T., Altamura, M., Malerba, S., Padalino, F., Calcagno, P., Murri, M. B., Escelsior, A., Giusti, L., Bianchini, V., Salza, A., Pacitti, F., Socci, V., Lucaselli, A., De Bartolomeis, A., Gramaglia, C., Feggi, A., Jona, A., Favaro, A., Tenconi, E., Meneguzzo, P., Ossola, P., Tonna, M., Gerra, M. L., Carmassi, C., Cremone, I. M., Carpita, B., Biondi, M., Di Fabio, F., Accinni, T., Brugnoli, R., Comparelli, A., Corigliano, V., Fagiolini, A., Bolognesi, S., Goracci, A., Di Lorenzo, G., Ribolsi, M., Niolu, C., Brasso, C., Riccardi, C., Del Favero, E., Monteleone, P., Cascino, G., Monteleone, A. M., Rocca, P., Rossi, A., Bertolino, A., Aguglia, E., Amore, M., Collantoni, E., Corrivetti, G., Cuomo, A., Bellomo, A., D'Ambrosio, E., Dell'Osso, L., Frascarelli, M., Giordano, G. M., Giuliani, L., Marchesi, C., Montemagni, C., Oldani, L., Pinna, F., Pompili, M., Roncone, R., Rossi, R., Siracusano, A., Vita, A., Zeppegno, P., Galderisi, S., and Maj, M.
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Adult ,Male ,Social Cognition ,Extrapyramidal symptoms ,Chlorpromazine ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Antipsychotic ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cognition ,Basal Ganglia Diseases ,Social cognition ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Antipsychotics ,Humans ,Extrapyramidal symptom ,Neurocognition ,Biological Psychiatry ,Pharmacology ,business.industry ,Parkinsonism ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Risperidone ,030227 psychiatry ,Settore MED/25 ,Schizophrenia ,Female ,Schizophrenic Psychology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Neurocognitive ,Antipsychotic Agents ,Psychopathology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
First generation antipsychotics (FGAs) are more likely to induce extrapyramidal side-effects (EPS) than second generation antipsychotics (SGAs), and EPS have been shown associated to cognitive deficits in schizophrenia. So far, no study has explored the relationships between EPS and social cognition (SC) in people with schizophrenia. Therefore, we assessed the prevalence of EPS in a large sample of drug-treated community-dwelling persons with schizophrenia and explored their relationships with patients' neurocognitive and SC abilities. 875 patients underwent EPS, psychopathological, neurocognitive and SC assessments by means of standardized measures. Relationships between EPS, psychopathology and neurocognitive and SC measures were investigated by correlation tests. Moreover, a partial correlation network was computed by means of a network analysis. 256 patients were treated with FGAs alone or in combination with SGA and 619 with SGAs. EPS were significantly more frequent in FGA-treated group than in the SGA-treated one. Patients with EPS disclosed a more severe psychopathology and were more impaired in neurocognitive and SC measures compared to those without EPS. Disorganization, expressive deficit, and duration of illness were significantly associated to both neurocognitive and SC measures while EPS were associated to neurocognitive measures only. The network analysis showed that parkinsonism was the sole EPS directly connected to both psychopathological and neurocognitive indices whereas no direct connection emerged between EPS and SC measures. Present findings confirm that EPS are still present in the era of SGAs and contribute, together with other clinical variables, to the neurocognitive but not to the SC impairment of patients with schizophrenia.
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- 2021
6. P.0354 Embodied cognition impairments in patients with anorexia nervosa: preliminary evidence from a controlled study
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Meregalli, V., primary, Collantoni, E., additional, Meneguzzo, P., additional, Tenconi, E., additional, Sala, A., additional, Munno, V., additional, Zuanon, S., additional, and Favaro, A., additional
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- 2021
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7. Factors Associated With Real-Life Functioning in Persons With Schizophrenia in a 4-Year Follow-up Study of the Italian Network for Research on Psychoses
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Mucci, A., Galderisi, S., Gibertoni, D., Rossi, A., Rocca, P., Bertolino, A., Aguglia, E., Amore, M., Bellomo, A., Biondi, M., Blasi, G., Brasso, C., Bucci, P., Carpiniello, B., Cuomo, A., Dell'Osso, L., Giordano, G. M., Marchesi, C., Monteleone, P., Niolu, C., Oldani, L., Pettorruso, M., Pompili, M., Roncone, R., Rossi, R., Tenconi, E., Vita, A., Zeppegno, P., Maj, M., Piegari, G., Aiello, C., Brando, F., Giuliani, L., Palumbo, D., Coccia, C., Papalino, M., Calia, V., Romano, R., Barlati, S., Deste, G., Valsecchi, P., Pinna, F., Lai, A., Lostia di Santa Sofia, S., Salvina Signorelli, M., Fusar Poli, L., Surace, T., Martinotti, G., Montemitro, C., Fraticelli, S., Altamura, M., Angelini, E., Elia, A., Calcagno, P., Belvederi Murri, M., Cattedra, S., Pacitti, F., Talevi, D., Socci, V., Giusti, L., Salza, A., Mammarella, S., de Bartolomeis, A., Favaro, A., Collantoni, E., Meneguzzo, P., Tonna, M., Ossola, P., Gerra, M. L., Gramaglia, C., Binda, V., Gambaro, E., Carmassi, C., Carpita, B., Cremone, I. M., Corrivetti, G., Cascino, G., Del Buono, G., Brugnoli, R., Comparelli, A., Corigliano, V., Buzzanca, A., Gerardi, N., Frascarelli, M., Fagiolini, A., Goracci, A., Bolognesi, S., Siracusano, A., Di Lorenzo, G., Ribolsi, M., Montemagni, C., Riccardi, C., Del Favero, E., Mucci, A., Galderisi, S., Gibertoni, D., Rossi, A., Rocca, P., Bertolino, A., Aguglia, E., Amore, M., Bellomo, A., Biondi, M., Blasi, G., Brasso, C., Bucci, P., Carpiniello, B., Cuomo, A., Dell'Osso, L., Giordano, G. M., Marchesi, C., Monteleone, P., Niolu, C., Oldani, L., Pettorruso, M., Pompili, M., Roncone, R., Rossi, R., Tenconi, E., Vita, A., Zeppegno, P., Maj, M., Mucci A., Galderisi S., Gibertoni D., Rossi A., Rocca P., Bertolino A., Aguglia E., Amore M., Bellomo A., Biondi M., Blasi G., Brasso C., Bucci P., Carpiniello B., Cuomo A., Dell'Osso L., Giordano G.M., Marchesi C., Monteleone P., Niolu C., Oldani L., Pettorruso M., Pompili M., Roncone R., Rossi R., Tenconi E., Vita A., Zeppegno P., and Maj M.
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Adult ,Hospitals, Psychiatric ,Male ,Mental Health Services ,Social Cognition ,Apathy ,Psychological intervention ,Relapse prevention ,schizophrenia ,functioning ,psychopatology ,Structural equation modeling ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Independent Living ,Italy ,Middle Aged ,Psychotic Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,Functional Status ,Original Investigation ,business.industry ,Mental health ,Hospitals ,Cognitive training ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Settore MED/25 ,schizophrenia, real-life functioning, SEM ,Psychiatric ,Work Skills ,business ,Psychosocial ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Psychopathology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Importance: The goal of schizophrenia treatment has shifted from symptom reduction and relapse prevention to functional recovery; however, recovery rates remain low. Prospective identification of variables associated with real-life functioning domains is essential for personalized and integrated treatment programs. Objective: To assess whether baseline illness-related variables, personal resources, and context-related factors are associated with work skills, interpersonal relationships, and everyday life skills at 4-year follow-up. Design, Setting, and Participants: This multicenter prospective cohort study was conducted across 24 Italian university psychiatric clinics or mental health departments in which 921 patients enrolled in a cross-sectional study were contacted after 4 years for reassessment. Recruitment of community-dwelling, clinically stable persons with schizophrenia was conducted from March 2016 to December 2017, and data were analyzed from January to May 2020. Main Outcomes and Measures: Psychopathology, social and nonsocial cognition, functional capacity, personal resources, and context-related factors were assessed, with real-life functioning as the main outcome. Structural equation modeling, multiple regression analyses, and latent change score modeling were used to identify variables that were associated with real-life functioning domains at follow-up and with changes from baseline in these domains. Results: In total, 618 participants (427 male [69.1%]; mean [SD] age, 45.1 [10.5] years) were included. Five baseline variables were directly associated with real-life functioning at follow-up: neurocognition with everyday life (β, 0.274; 95% CI, 0.207-0.341; P
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- 2021
8. The influence of autistic symptoms on social and non-social cognition and on real-life functioning in people with schizophrenia: Evidence from the Italian Network for Research on Psychoses multicenter study
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Vita, A., Barlati, S., Deste, G., Rocca, P., Rossi, A., Bertolino, A., Aguglia, E., Amore, M., Bellomo, A., Biondi, M., Carpiniello, B., Collantoni, E., Cuomo, A., D'Ambrosio, E., dell' Osso, L., di Giannantonio, M., Giordano, G. M., Marchesi, C., Monteleone, P., Montemagni, C., Oldani, L., Pompili, M., Roncone, R., Rossi, R., Siracusano, A., Zeppegno, P., Nibbio, G., Galderisi, S., Maj, M., Ceraso, A., Galluzzo, A., Lisoni, J., Di Palo, P., Papalino, M., Romano, R., Pinna, F., Lai, A., di Santa Sofia, S. L., Bucci, P., Piegari, G., Brando, F., Giuliani, L., Signorelli, M. S., Poli, L. F., Martinotti, G., Pettorruso, M., Montemitro, C., Altamura, M., Malerba, S., Padalino, F., Amerio, A., Cal-Cagno, P., Zampogna, D., Giusti, L., Salza, A., Mammarella, S., Pacitti, F., Socci, V., Talevi, D., Gramaglia, C., Feggi, A., Jona, A., Favaro, A., Tenconi, E., Meneguzzo, P., Ossola, P., Tonna, M., Gerra, M. L., Carmassi, C., Gesi, C., Carpita, B., Corrivetti, G., Cascino, G., del Buono, G., Di Fabio, F., Buzzanca, A., Girardi, N., Brugnoli, R., Comparelli, A., Corigliano, V., Fagiolini, A., Bolognesi, S., Goracci, A., Di Lorenzo, G., Niolu, C., Ribolsi, M., Brasso, C., Riccardi, C., Del Favero, E., Vita, A., Barlati, S., Deste, G., Rocca, P., Rossi, A., Bertolino, A., Aguglia, E., Amore, M., Bellomo, A., Biondi, M., Carpiniello, B., Collantoni, E., Cuomo, A., D'Ambrosio, E., dell' Osso, L., di Giannantonio, M., Giordano, G. M., Marchesi, C., Monteleone, P., Montemagni, C., Oldani, L., Pompili, M., Roncone, R., Rossi, R., Siracusano, A., Zeppegno, P., Nibbio, G., Galderisi, S., Maj, M., Ceraso, A., Galluzzo, A., Lisoni, J., Di Palo, P., Papalino, M., Romano, R., Pinna, F., Lai, A., di Santa Sofia, S. L., Bucci, P., Piegari, G., Brando, F., Giuliani, L., Signorelli, M. S., Poli, L. F., Martinotti, G., Pettorruso, M., Montemitro, C., Altamura, M., Malerba, S., Padalino, F., Amerio, A., Cal-Cagno, P., Zampogna, D., Giusti, L., Salza, A., Mammarella, S., Pacitti, F., Socci, V., Talevi, D., Gramaglia, C., Feggi, A., Jona, A., Favaro, A., Tenconi, E., Meneguzzo, P., Ossola, P., Tonna, M., Gerra, M. L., Carmassi, C., Gesi, C., Carpita, B., Corrivetti, G., Cascino, G., del Buono, G., Di Fabio, F., Buzzanca, A., Girardi, N., Brugnoli, R., Comparelli, A., Corigliano, V., Fagiolini, A., Bolognesi, S., Goracci, A., Di Lorenzo, G., Niolu, C., Ribolsi, M., Brasso, C., Riccardi, C., and Del Favero, E.
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schizophrenia ,autism spectrum disorders ,cognition ,psychosocial functioning ,social cognition ,Adult ,Male ,Social Cognition ,Interpersonal Relation ,autism spectrum disorders, cognition, psychosocial functioning, schizophrenia, social cognition ,Disease ,Autism spectrum disorders ,Cognition ,Psychosocial functioning ,Schizophrenia ,Social cognition ,Psychotic Disorder ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,03 medical and health sciences ,Interpersonal relationship ,0302 clinical medicine ,mental disorders ,Medicine ,Humans ,Interpersonal Relations ,Autism spectrum disorder ,Autistic Disorder ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Multicenter study ,Settore MED/25 ,Italy ,Psychotic Disorders ,Autism ,Female ,Verbal memory ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Research Article ,Clinical psychology ,Human - Abstract
Background Autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) and schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSDs), although conceptualized as separate entities, may share some clinical and neurobiological features. ASD symptoms may have a relevant role in determining a more severe clinical presentation of schizophrenic disorder but their relationships with cognitive aspects and functional outcomes of the disease remain to be addressed in large samples of individuals. Aims To investigate the clinical, cognitive, and functional correlates of ASD symptoms in a large sample of people diagnosed with schizophrenia. Methods The severity of ASD symptoms was measured with the PANSS Autism Severity Scale (PAUSS) in 921 individuals recruited for the Italian Network for Research on Psychoses multicenter study. Based on the PAUSS scores, three groups of subjects were compared on a wide array of cognitive and functional measures. Results Subjects with more severe ASD symptoms showed a poorer performance in the processing speed (p = 0.010), attention (p = 0.011), verbal memory (p = 0.035), and social cognition (p = 0.001) domains, and an overall lower global cognitive composite score (p = 0.010). Subjects with more severe ASD symptoms also showed poorer functional capacity (p = 0.004), real-world interpersonal relationships (p p Conclusions These findings strengthen the notion that ASD symptoms may have a relevant impact on different aspects of the disease, crucial to the life of people with schizophrenia. Prominent ASD symptoms may characterize a specific subpopulation of individuals with SSD.
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- 2020
9. The complex relationship between self-reported 'personal recovery' and clinical recovery in schizophrenia
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Rossi, A, Amore, M, Galderisi, S, Rocca, P, Bertolino, A, Aguglia, E, Amodeo, G, Bellomo, A, Bucci, P, Buzzanca, A, Carpiniello, B, Comparelli, A, Dell'Osso, L, Giannantonio, M, Mancini, M, Marchesi, C, Monteleone, P, Montemagni, C, Oldani, L, Roncone, R, Siracusano, A, Stratta, P, Tenconi, E, Vignapiano, A, Vita, A, Zeppegno, P, Maj, M, Rossetti, M, Rossi, R, Santarelli, V, Giusti, L, Malavolta, M, Salza, A, Palumbo, D, Patriarca, S, Chieffi, M, Attrotto, M, Colagiorgio, L, Andriola, I, Atti, A, Barlati, S, Deste, G, Galluzzo, A, Pinna, F, Deriu, L., Sanna, L, Signorelli, M., Minutolo, G, Cannavò, D, Martinotti, G, Acciavatti, T, Corbo, M, Altamura, M, Carnevale, R, Malerba, S, Murri, M, Calcagno, P, Bugliani, M, Serati, M, Bartolomeis, A, Gramaglia, C, Gattoni, E, Gambaro, E, Collantoni, E, Cremonese, C, Rossi, E, Ossola, P, Tonna, M, Panfilis, C, Rutigliano, G, Gesi, C, Carmassi, C, Biondi, M, Girardi, P, Brugnoli, R, Fabio, F, Pietro, S, Girardi, N, Niolu, C, Lorenzo, G, Ribolsi, M, Corrivetti, G, Pinto, G, Longobardi, N, Fagiolini, A, Goracci, A, Bolognesi, S, Bellino, S, Villari, V, Bracale, N, Rossi, A., Amore, M., Galderisi, S., Rocca, P., Bertolino, A., Aguglia, E., Amodeo, G., Bellomo, A., Bucci, P., Buzzanca, A., Carpiniello, B., Comparelli, A., Dell'Osso, L., Giannantonio, M. D., Mancini, M., Marchesi, C., Monteleone, P., Montemagni, C., Oldani, L., Roncone, R., Siracusano, A., Stratta, P., Tenconi, E., Vignapiano, A., Vita, A., Zeppegno, P., Maj, M., Rossetti, M. C., Rossi, R., Santarelli, V., Giusti, L., Malavolta, M., Salza, A., Palumbo, D., Patriarca, S., Chieffi, M., Attrotto, M. T., Colagiorgio, L., Andriola, I., Atti, A. R., Barlati, S., Deste, G., Galluzzo, A., Pinna, F., Deriu, L., Sanna, L., Signorelli, M. S., Minutolo, G., Cannavo, D., Martinotti, G., Acciavatti, T., Corbo, M., Altamura, M., Carnevale, R., Malerba, S., Murri, M. B., Calcagno, P., Bugliani, M., Serati, M., Bartolomeis, A., Gramaglia, C., Gattoni, E., Gambaro, E., Collantoni, E., Cremonese, C., Rossi, E., Ossola, P., Tonna, M., Panfilis, C. D., Rutigliano, G., Gesi, C., Carmassi, C., Biondi, M., Girardi, P., Brugnoli, R., Fabio, F. D., Pietro, S. D., Girardi, N., Niolu, C., Lorenzo, G. D., Ribolsi, M., Corrivetti, G., Pinto, G., Longobardi, N., Fagiolini, A., Goracci, A., Bolognesi, S., Bellino, S., Villari, V., and Bracale, N.
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Adult ,Male ,Schizophrenia, Personal recovery, Clinical recovery, Insight, Recovery styles, Cluster analysis ,Clinical recovery ,Coping (psychology) ,Cross-sectional study ,Recovery style ,03 medical and health sciences ,Diagnostic Self Evaluation ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cluster analysis ,Recovery styles ,Insight ,Personal recovery ,Schizophrenia ,Cluster Analysis ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Self Report ,Recovery of Function ,Schizophrenic Psychology ,Cluster analysi ,Self report ,Settore MED/25 - Psichiatria ,Biological Psychiatry ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental Health ,Psychiatric status rating scales ,Biological psychiatry ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Self-reported 'personal recovery' and clinical recovery in schizophrenia (SRPR and CR. respectively) reflect different perspectives in schizophrenia outcome, not necessarily concordant with each other and usually representing the consumer's or the therapist's point of view. By means of a cluster analysis on SRPR related variables, we identified three dusters. The first and third cluster included subjects with the best and the poorest clinical outcome respectively. The second cluster was characterized by better insight, higher levels of depression and stigma, lowest self-esteem and personal strength, and highest emotional coping. The first duster showed positive features of recovery, while the third duster showed negative features. The second cluster, with the most positive insight, showed a more complex pattern, a some-what 'paradoxical' mixture of positive and negative personal and clinical features of recovery. The present results suggest the need for a characterization of persons with schizophrenia along SRPR and CR dimensions to design individualized and integrated treatment programs aimed to improve insight and coping strategies, reduce stigma and shape recovery styles. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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- 2018
10. Treatment in Anorexia Nervosa: The Role of Neuropsychological Features in Predicting Response
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Meneguzzo, P., primary, Collantoni, E., additional, Tenconi, E., additional, Bonello, E., additional, Croatto, G., additional, Degortes, D., additional, Santonastaso, P., additional, and Favaro, A., additional
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- 2017
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11. Structural Covariance Networks in Anorexia Nervosa (AN): A Multimodal Graph Theoretical Analysis
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Collantoni, E., primary, Meneguzzo, P., additional, Tenconi, E., additional, Manara, R., additional, Santonastaso, P., additional, and Favaro, A., additional
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- 2017
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12. Prevalence, incidence and comparative meta-analysis of all-cause and specific-cause cardiovascular disease in patients with serious mental illness
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Solmi, M., primary, Veronese, N., additional, Beatrice, B., additional, Stella, R., additional, Paolo, S., additional, Davide, G., additional, Collantoni, E., additional, Pigato, G., additional, Favaro, A., additional, Stubbs, B., additional, Carvalho, A.F., additional, Vacampfort, D., additional, and Correll, C.U., additional
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- 2017
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13. Serotonin transporter gene polymorphism in eating disorders: Data from a new biobank and META-analysis of previous studies
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Solmi, M., primary, Gallicchio, D., additional, Collantoni, E., additional, Correll, C.U., additional, Clementi, M., additional, Pinato, C., additional, Forzan, M., additional, Cassina, M., additional, Fontana, F., additional, Giannunzio, V., additional, Piva, I., additional, Siani, R., additional, Salvo, P., additional, Santonastaso, P., additional, Tenconi, E., additional, Veronese, N., additional, and Favaro, A., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Accuracy of self-assessment of real-life functioning in schizophrenia
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Rocca, Paola, Brasso, Claudio, Montemagni, Cristiana, Bellino, Silvio, Rossi, Alessandro, Bertolino, Alessandro, Gibertoni, Dino, Aguglia, Eugenio, Amore, Mario, Andriola, Ileana, Bellomo, Antonello, Bucci, Paola, Buzzanca, Antonino, Carpiniello, Bernardo, Cuomo, Alessandro, Dell'Osso, Liliana, Favaro, Angela, Giordano, Giulia Maria, Marchesi, Carlo, Monteleone, Palmiero, Oldani, Lucio, Pompili, Maurizio, Roncone, Rita, Rossi, Rodolfo, Siracusano, Alberto, Vita, Antonio, Zeppegno, Patrizia, Galderisi, Silvana, Maj, Mario, Bozzatello, Paola, Badino, Cristina, Giordano, Benedetta, Di Palo, Piergiuseppe, Calia, Vitalba, Papalino, Marco, Barlati, Stefano, Deste, Giacomo, Ceraso, Anna, Pinna, Federica, Olivieri, Benedetta, Manca, Daniela, Piegari, Giuseppe, Brando, Francesco, Giuliani, Luigi, Aiello, Carmen, Fusar Poli, Laura, Concerto, Carmen, Surace, Teresa, Altamura, Mario, Malerba, Stefania, Padalino, Flavia, Calcagno, Pietro, Belvederi Murri, Martino, Amerio, Andrea, Pacitti, Francesca, Socci, Valentina, Lucaselli, Alessia, Giusti, Laura, Salza, Anna, Ussorio, Donatella, Iasevoli, Felice, Gramaglia, Carla, Gambaro, Eleonora, Gattoni, Eleonora, Tenconi, Elena, Collantoni, Enrico, Meneguzzo, Paolo, Ossola, Paolo, Tonna, Matteo, Gerra, Maria Lidia, Carmassi, Claudia, Carpita, Barbara, Cremone, Ivan Mirko, Corrivetti, Giulio, Cascino, Giammarco, Marciello, Francesca, Brugnoli, Roberto, Comparelli, Anna, Corigliano, Valentina, Girardi, Nicoletta, Accinni, Tommaso, Carlone, Luca, Fagiolini, Andrea, Goracci, Arianna, Bolognesi, Simone, Di Lorenzo, Giorgio, Niolu, Cinzia, Ribolsi, Michele, Rocca, P., Brasso, C., Montemagni, C., Bellino, S., Rossi, A., Bertolino, A., Gibertoni, D., Aguglia, E., Amore, M., Andriola, I., Bellomo, A., Bucci, P., Buzzanca, A., Carpiniello, B., Cuomo, A., Dell'Osso, L., Favaro, A., Giordano, G. M., Marchesi, C., Monteleone, P., Oldani, L., Pompili, M., Roncone, R., Rossi, R., Siracusano, A., Vita, A., Zeppegno, P., Galderisi, S., Maj, M., Bozzatello, P., Badino, C., Giordano, B., Di Palo, P., Calia, V., Papalino, M., Barlati, S., Deste, G., Ceraso, A., Pinna, F., Olivieri, B., Manca, D., Piegari, G., Brando, F., Giuliani, L., Aiello, C., Poli, L. F., Concerto, C., Surace, T., Altamura, M., Malerba, S., Padalino, F., Calcagno, P., Murri, M. B., Amerio, A., Pacitti, F., Socci, V., Lucaselli, A., Giusti, L., Salza, A., Ussorio, D., Iasevoli, F., Gramaglia, C., Gambaro, E., Gattoni, E., Tenconi, E., Collantoni, E., Meneguzzo, P., Ossola, P., Tonna, M., Gerra, M. L., Carmassi, C., Carpita, B., Cremone, I. M., Corrivetti, G., Cascino, G., Marciello, F., Brugnoli, R., Comparelli, A., Corigliano, V., Girardi, N., Accinni, T., Carlone, L., Fagiolini, A., Goracci, A., Bolognesi, S., Di Lorenzo, G., Niolu, C., Ribolsi, M., Rocca P., Brasso C., Montemagni C., Bellino S., Rossi A., Bertolino A., Gibertoni D., Aguglia E., Amore M., Andriola I., Bellomo A., Bucci P., Buzzanca A., Carpiniello B., Cuomo A., Dell'Osso L., Favaro A., Giordano G.M., Marchesi C., Monteleone P., Oldani L., Pompili M., Roncone R., Rossi R., Siracusano A., Vita A., Zeppegno P., Galderisi S., Maj M., Bozzatello P., Badino C., Giordano B., Di Palo P., Calia V., Papalino M., Barlati S., Deste G., Ceraso A., Pinna F., Olivieri B., Manca D., Piegari G., Brando F., Giuliani L., Aiello C., Poli L.F., Concerto C., Surace T., Altamura M., Malerba S., Padalino F., Calcagno P., Murri M.B., Amerio A., Pacitti F., Socci V., Lucaselli A., Giusti L., Salza A., Ussorio D., Iasevoli F., Gramaglia C., Gambaro E., Gattoni E., Tenconi E., Collantoni E., Meneguzzo P., Ossola P., Tonna M., Gerra M.L., Carmassi C., Carpita B., Cremone I.M., Corrivetti G., Cascino G., Marciello F., Brugnoli R., Comparelli A., Corigliano V., Girardi N., Accinni T., Carlone L., Fagiolini A., Goracci A., Bolognesi S., Di Lorenzo G., Niolu C., and Ribolsi M.
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Self-assessment ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Concordance ,RC435-571 ,schizophrenia, real-life functioning, reliability ,Article ,Correlation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Interpersonal relationship ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Self-assessment, schizophrenia, diagnosis ,Psychiatry ,Rehabilitation ,medicine.disease ,Psychosis ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Settore MED/25 ,Schizophrenia ,Cohort ,Work Skills ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
A consensus has not yet been reached regarding the accuracy of people with schizophrenia in self-reporting their real-life functioning. In a large (n = 618) cohort of stable, community-dwelling schizophrenia patients we sought to: (1) examine the concordance of patients’ reports of their real-life functioning with the reports of their key caregiver; (2) identify which patient characteristics are associated to the differences between patients and informants. Patient-caregiver concordance of the ratings in three Specific Level of Functioning Scale (SLOF) domains (interpersonal relationships, everyday life skills, work skills) was evaluated with matched-pair t tests, the Lin’s concordance correlation, Somers’ D, and Bland–Altman plots with limits of agreement (LOA). Predictors of the patient-caregiver differences in SLOF ratings were assessed with a linear regression with multivariable fractional polynomials. Patients’ self-evaluation of functioning was higher than caregivers’ in all the evaluated domains of the SLOF and 17.6% of the patients exceeded the LOA, thus providing a self-evaluation discordant from their key caregivers. The strongest predictors of patient-caregiver discrepancies were caregivers’ ratings in each SLOF domain. In clinically stable outpatients with a moderate degree of functional impairment, self-evaluation with the SLOF scale can become a useful, informative and reliable clinical tool to design a tailored rehabilitation program.
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- 2021
15. The interplay among psychopathology, personal resources, context-related factors and real-life functioning in schizophrenia: stability in relationships after 4 years and differences in network structure between recovered and non-recovered patients
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Galderisi, Silvana, Rucci, Paola, Mucci, Armida, Rossi, Alessandro, Rocca, Paola, Bertolino, Alessandro, Aguglia, Eugenio, Amore, Mario, Bellomo, Antonello, Bozzatello, Paola, Bucci, Paola, Carpiniello, Bernardo, Collantoni, Enrico, Cuomo, Alessandro, Dell'Osso, Liliana, Di Fabio, Fabio, di Giannantonio, Massimo, Gibertoni, Dino, Giordano, Giulia Maria, Marchesi, Carlo, Monteleone, Palmiero, Oldani, Lucio, Pompili, Maurizio, Roncone, Rita, Rossi, Rodolfo, Siracusano, Alberto, Vita, Antonio, Zeppegno, Patrizia, Maj, Mario, Italian Network for Research on Psychoses, Francesco, Catapano, Giuseppe, Piegari, Carmen, Aiello, Francesco, Brando, Luigi, Giuliani, Daria, Pietrafesa, Marco, Papalino, Giovanni, Mercadante, Piergiuseppe, Di Palo, Stefano, Barlati, Giacomo, Deste, Paolo, Valsecchi, Federica, Pinna, Benedetta, Olivieri, Daniela, Manca, Maria Salvina, Signorelli, Laura, Fusar Poli, Domenico, De Berardis, Silvia, Fraticelli, Mariangela, Corbo, Stefano, Pallanti, Mario, Altamura, Raffaella, Carnevale, Stefania, Malerba, Pietro, Calcagno, Domenico, Zampogna, Alessandro, Corso, Giusti, Laura, Salza, Anna, Ussorio, Donatella, Talevi, Dalila, Socci, Valentina, Pacitti, Francesca, Andrea, de Bartolomeis, Carla, Gramaglia, Eleonora, Gambaro, Eleonora, Gattoni, Angela, Favaro, Elena, Tenconi, Paolo, Meneguzzo, Matteo, Tonna, Paolo, Ossola, Maria Lidia, Gerra, Claudia, Carmassi, Ivan, Cremone, Barbara, Carpita, Nicoletta, Girardi, Marianna, Frascarelli, Antonio, Buzzanca, Roberto, Brugnoli, Anna, Comparelli, Valentina, Corigliano, Giorgio, Di Lorenzo, Cinzia, Niolu, Michele, Ribolsi, Giulio, Corrivetti, Giammarco, Cascino, Gianfranco, del Buono, Simone, Bolognesi, Andrea, Fagiolini, Arianna, Goracci, Silvio, Bellino, Cristiana, Montemagni, Claudio, Brasso, Galderisi, S., Rucci, P., Mucci, A., Rossi, A., Rocca, P., Bertolino, A., Aguglia, E., Amore, M., Bellomo, A., Bozzatello, P., Bucci, P., Carpiniello, B., Collantoni, E., Cuomo, A., Dell'Osso, L., Di Fabio, F., Di Giannantonio, M., Gibertoni, D., Giordano, G. M., Marchesi, C., Monteleone, P., Oldani, L., Pompili, M., Roncone, R., Rossi, R., Siracusano, A., Vita, A., Zeppegno, P., Maj, M., Catapano, F., Piegari, G., Aiello, C., Brando, F., Giuliani, L., Pietrafesa, D., Papalino, M., Mercadante, G., Di Palo, P., Barlati, S., Deste, G., Valsecchi, P., Pinna, F., Olivieri, B., Manca, D., Signorelli, M. S., Poli, L. F., De Berardis, D., Fraticelli, S., Corbo, M., Pallanti, S., Altamura, M., Carnevale, R., Malerba, S., Calcagno, P., Zampogna, D., Corso, A., Giusti, L., Salza, A., Ussorio, D., Talevi, D., Socci, V., Pacitti, F., de Bartolomeis, A., Gramaglia, C., Gambaro, E., Gattoni, E., Favaro, A., Tenconi, E., Meneguzzo, P., Tonna, M., Ossola, P., Gerra, M. L., Carmassi, C., Cremone, I., Carpita, B., Girardi, N., Frascarelli, M., Buzzanca, A., Brugnoli, R., Comparelli, A., Corigliano, V., Di Lorenzo, G., Niolu, C., Ribolsi, M., Corrivetti, G., Cascino, G., Del Buono, G., Bolognesi, S., Fagiolini, A., Goracci, A., Bellino, S., Montemagni, C., Brasso, C., di Giannantonio, M., Fusar Poli, L., del Buono, G., Galderisi S., Rucci P., Mucci A., Rossi A., Rocca P., Bertolino A., Aguglia E., Amore M., Bellomo A., Bozzatello P., Bucci P., Carpiniello B., Collantoni E., Cuomo A., Dell'osso L., Di Fabio F., Di Giannantonio M., Gibertoni D., Giordano G.M., Marchesi C., Monteleone P., Oldani L., Pompili M., Roncone R., Rossi R., Siracusano A., Vita A., Zeppegno P., Maj M., Catapano F., Piegari G., Aiello C., Brando F., Giuliani L., Pietrafesa D., Papalino M., Mercadante G., Di Palo P., Barlati S., Deste G., Valsecchi P., Pinna F., Olivieri B., Manca D., Signorelli M.S., Poli L.F., De Berardis D., Fraticelli S., Corbo M., Pallanti S., Altamura M., Carnevale R., Malerba S., Calcagno P., Zampogna D., Corso A., Giusti L., Salza A., Ussorio D., Talevi D., Socci V., Pacitti F., de Bartolomeis A., Gramaglia C., Gambaro E., Gattoni E., Favaro A., Tenconi E., Meneguzzo P., Tonna M., Ossola P., Gerra M.L., Carmassi C., Cremone I., Carpita B., Girardi N., Frascarelli M., Buzzanca A., Brugnoli R., Comparelli A., Corigliano V., Di Lorenzo G., Niolu C., Ribolsi M., Corrivetti G., Cascino G., Del Buono G., Bolognesi S., Fagiolini A., Goracci A., Bellino S., Montemagni C., and Brasso C.
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Schizophrenia ,everyday life skills ,functional capacity ,internalized stigma ,network analysis ,personal resources ,psychopathology ,real-life functioning ,recovery ,Closeness ,Context (language use) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Betweenness centrality ,medicine ,network analysi ,Everyday life ,Baseline (configuration management) ,personal resource ,Research Reports ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Settore MED/25 ,everyday life skill ,Pshychiatric Mental Health ,Psychology ,Centrality ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Psychopathology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Improving real-life functioning is the main goal of the most advanced integrated treatment programs in people with schizophrenia. The Italian Network for Research on Psychoses previously explored, by using network analysis, the interplay among illness-related variables, personal resources, context-related factors and real-life functioning in a large sample of patients with schizophrenia. The same research network has now completed a 4-year follow-up of the original sample. In the present study, we used network analysis to test whether the pattern of relationships among all variables investigated at baseline was similar at follow-up. In addition, we compared the network structure of patients who were classified as recovered at follow-up versus those who did not recover. Six hundred eighteen subjects recruited at baseline could be assessed in the follow-up study. The network structure did not change significantly from baseline to follow-up, and the overall strength of the connections among variables increased slightly, but not significantly. Functional capacity and everyday life skills had a high betweenness and closeness in the network at follow-up, as they had at baseline, while psychopathological variables remained more peripheral. The network structure and connectivity of non-recovered patients were similar to those observed in the whole sample, but very different from those in recovered subjects, in which we found few connections only. These data strongly suggest that tightly coupled symptoms/dysfunctions tend to maintain each other's activation, contributing to poor outcome in schizophrenia. Early and integrated treatment plans, targeting variables with high centrality, might prevent the emergence of self-reinforcing networks of symptoms and dysfunctions in people with schizophrenia.
- Published
- 2020
16. What do Italian healthcare professionals think about orthorexia nervosa? Results from a multicenter survey
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Carla Gramaglia, Eleonora Gattoni, Daniela Ferrante, Giovanni Abbate-Daga, Erika Baldissera, Simona Calugi, Giammarco Cascino, Giovanni Castellini, Enrico Collantoni, Angela Favaro, Enrica Marzola, Alessio Maria Monteleone, Palmiero Monteleone, Maria Ginevra Oriani, Caterina Renna, Valdo Ricca, Pierandrea Salvo, Paolo Santonastaso, Cristina Segura-Garcia, Umberto Volpe, Patrizia Zeppegno, Gramaglia, C., Gattoni, E., Ferrante, D., Abbate-Daga, G., Baldissera, E., Calugi, S., Cascino, G., Castellini, G., Collantoni, E., Favaro, A., Marzola, E., Monteleone, A. M., Monteleone, P., Oriani, M. G., Renna, C., Ricca, V., Salvo, P., Santonastaso, P., Segura-Garcia, C., Volpe, U., and Zeppegno, P.
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Orthorexia ,Health Personnel ,Classification ,Diagnosis ,Eating disorders ,Health professionals ,Cohort Studies ,Humans ,Italy ,Obsessive Behavior ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Feeding and Eating Disorders ,Orthorexia Nervosa ,Eating disorder ,Health professional ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Original Article ,Diagnosi - Abstract
Purpose Orthorexia nervosa (ON) is an obsession for healthy and proper nutrition. Diagnostic criteria for ON are lacking and the psychopathology of ON is still a matter of debate in the clinical and scientific community. Our aim was to better understand the Italian clinical and scientific community’s opinion about ON. Methods Anonymous online survey for Italian healthcare professionals, implemented with the REDCap platform and spread through a multicenter collaboration. Information was gathered about socio-demographic, educational and occupational features, as well as about experience in the diagnosis and treatment of EDs. The main part of the survey focused on ON and its features, classification and sociocultural correlates. Results The survey was completed by 343 participants. Most responders (68.2%) considered ON as a variant of Eating Disorders (EDs), and 58.6% a possible prodromal phase or evolution of Anorexia Nervosa (AN). Most participants (68.5%) thought the next DSM should include a specific diagnostic category for ON, preferably in the EDs macro-category (82.1%). Moreover, 77.3% of responders thought that ON deserves more attention on behalf of researchers and clinicians, and that its treatment should be similar to that for EDs (60.9%). Participants thinking that ON should have its own diagnostic category in the next DSM edition had greater odds of being younger (p = 0.004) and of considering ON a prodromic phase of another ED, such as AN (p = 0.039). Discussion Our survey suggests that the scientific community still seems split between those who consider ON as a separate disorder and those who do not. More research is still needed to better understand the construct of ON and its relationship with EDs; disadvantages and advantages of giving ON its own diagnosis should be balanced. Level of evidence V (descriptive cohort study). Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s40519-021-01336-9.
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- 2022
17. Premorbid academic and social functioning in patients with schizophrenia and its associations with negative symptoms and cognition
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Bucci, P., Galderisi, S., Mucci, A., Rossi, A., Rocca, P., Bertolino, A., Aguglia, E., Amore, M., Andriola, I., Bellomo, A., Biondi, M., Cuomo, A., Dell'Osso, L., Favaro, A., Gambi, F., Giordano, G. M., Girardi, P., Marchesi, C., Monteleone, P., Montemagni, C., Niolu, C., Oldani, L., Pacitti, F., Pinna, F., Roncone, R., Vita, A., Zeppegno, P., Maj, M., Patriarca, Sara, Pietrafesa, Daria, Aiello, Carmen, Longo, Luisa, Barone, Marina, Romano, Raffaella, Atti, Anna Rita, Barlati, Stefano, Deste, Giacomo, Valsecchi, Paolo, Carpiniello, Bernardo, Tusconi, Massimo, Puddu, Laura, Signorelli, Maria Salvina, Cannavò, Dario, Minutolo, Giuseppe, Corbo, Mariangela, Montemitro, Chiara, Baroni, Gaia, Altamura, Mario, La Montagna, Maddalena, Carnevale, Raffaella, Murri, Martino Belvederi, Calcagno, Pietro, Bugliani, Michele, Pizziconi, Giulia, Logozzo, Francesca, Rossi, Rodolfo, Giusti, Laura, Salza, Anna, Malavolta, Maurizio, Orsenigo, Giulia, Grassi, Silvia, De Bartolomeis, Andrea, Gramaglia, Carla, Gattoni, Eleonora, Gambaro, Eleonora, Tenconi, Elena, Ferronato, Luisa, Collantoni, Enrico, Tonna, Matteo, Ossola, Paolo, Gerra, Maria Lidia, Carmassi, Claudia, Cremone, Ivan Mirko, Carpita, Barbara, Buzzanca, Antonio, Girardi, Nicoletta, Frascarelli, Marianna, Del Casale, Antonio, Comparelli, Anna, Corigliano, Valentina, Siracusano, Alberto, Di Lorenzo, Giorgio, Ribolsi, Michele, Corrivetti, Giulio, Bartoli, Luca, Del Buono, Gianfranco, Fagiolini, Andrea, Bolognesi, Simone, Goracci, Arianna, Mancini, Irene, Bava, Irene, Cardillo, Simona, Bucci P., Galderisi S., Mucci A., Rossi A., Rocca P., Bertolino A., Aguglia E., Amore M., Andriola I., Bellomo A., Biondi M., Cuomo A., dell'Osso L., Favaro A., Gambi F., Giordano G.M., Girardi P., Marchesi C., Monteleone P., Montemagni C., Niolu C., Oldani L., Pacitti F., Pinna F., Roncone R., Vita A., Zeppegno P., Maj M., Patriarca S., Pietrafesa D., Aiello C., Longo L., Barone M., Romano R., Atti A.R., Barlati S., Deste G., Valsecchi P., Carpiniello B., Tusconi M., Puddu L., Signorelli M.S., Cannavo D., Minutolo G., Corbo M., Montemitro C., Baroni G., Altamura M., La Montagna M., Carnevale R., Murri M.B., Calcagno P., Bugliani M., Pizziconi G., Logozzo F., Rossi R., Giusti L., Salza A., Malavolta M., Orsenigo G., Grassi S., De Bartolomeis A., Gramaglia C., Gattoni E., Gambaro E., Tenconi E., Ferronato L., Collantoni E., Tonna M., Ossola P., Gerra M.L., Carmassi C., Cremone I.M., Carpita B., Buzzanca A., Girardi N., Frascarelli M., Del Casale A., Comparelli A., Corigliano V., Siracusano A., Di Lorenzo G., Ribolsi M., Corrivetti G., Bartoli L., Del Buono G., Fagiolini A., Bolognesi S., Goracci A., Mancini I., Bava I., Cardillo S., Bucci, P., Galderisi, S., Mucci, A., Rossi, A., Rocca, P., Bertolino, A., Aguglia, E., Amore, M., Andriola, I., Bellomo, A., Biondi, Maria, Cuomo, Anna, Dell'Osso, L., Favaro, A., Gambi, F., Giordano, G. M., Girardi, P., Marchesi, C., Monteleone, P., Montemagni, C., Niolu, C., Oldani, L., Pacitti, F., Pinna, F., Roncone, R., DE VITA, Anna, Zeppegno, P., Maj, M., Patriarca, Sara, Pietrafesa, Daria, Aiello, Carmen, Longo, Luisa, Barone, Marina, Romano, Raffaella, Atti, Anna Rita, Barlati, Stefano, Deste, Giacomo, Valsecchi, Paolo, Carpiniello, Bernardo, Tusconi, Massimo, Puddu, Laura, Signorelli, Maria Salvina, Cannavò, Dario, Minutolo, Giuseppe, Corbo, Mariangela, Montemitro, Chiara, Baroni, Gaia, Altamura, Mario, La Montagna, Maddalena, Carnevale, Raffaella, Murri, Martino Belvederi, Calcagno, Pietro, Bugliani, Michele, Pizziconi, Giulia, Logozzo, Francesca, Rossi, Rodolfo, Giusti, Laura, Salza, Anna, Malavolta, Maurizio, Orsenigo, Giulia, Grassi, Silvia, De Bartolomeis, Andrea, Gramaglia, Carla, Gattoni, Eleonora, Gambaro, Eleonora, Tenconi, Elena, Ferronato, Luisa, Collantoni, Enrico, Tonna, Matteo, Ossola, Paolo, Gerra, Maria Lidia, Carmassi, Claudia, Cremone, Ivan Mirko, Carpita, Barbara, Buzzanca, Antonio, Girardi, Nicoletta, Frascarelli, Marianna, Del Casale, Antonio, Comparelli, Anna, Corigliano, Valentina, Siracusano, Alberto, Di Lorenzo, Giorgio, Ribolsi, Michele, Corrivetti, Giulio, Bartoli, Luca, Del Buono, Gianfranco, Fagiolini, Andrea, Bolognesi, Simone, Goracci, Arianna, Mancini, Irene, Bava, Irene, Cardillo, Simona, Biondi, M., Cuomo, A., Vita, A., and Casale, Antonio
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Male ,avolition ,Severity of Illness Index ,cognitive functioning ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cognition ,Academic Performance ,Medicine ,Psychopathology ,Depression ,primary negative symptoms ,Middle Aged ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scale ,avolition, cognitive functioning, poor emotion expression, premorbid adjustment, primary negative symptoms ,poor emotion expression ,premorbid adjustment ,Psychiatry and Mental Health ,Memory, Short-Term ,Schizophrenia ,Female ,Schizophrenic Psychology ,medicine.symptom ,Psychosocial ,Social Adjustment ,Clinical psychology ,Human ,Adult ,primary negative symptom ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cognition Disorder ,Memory ,Social cognition ,Humans ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Cognitive skill ,Social Behavior ,Aged ,Cognition Disorders ,Motivation ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Settore MED/25 - Psichiatria ,Avolition ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Short-Term ,business ,Neurocognitive ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Objective The study aimed to explore premorbid academic and social functioning in patients with schizophrenia, and its associations with the severity of negative symptoms and neurocognitive impairment. Method Premorbid adjustment (PA) in patients with schizophrenia was compared to early adjustment in unaffected first-degree relatives and healthy controls. Its associations with psychopathology, cognition, and real-life functioning were investigated. The associations of PA with primary negative symptoms and their two factors were explored. Results We found an impairment of academic and social PA in patients (P ≤ 0.000001) and an impairment of academic aspects of early adjustment in relatives (P ≤ 0.01). Patients with poor PA showed greater severity of negative symptoms (limited to avolition after excluding the effect of depression/parkinsonism), working memory, social cognition, and real-life functioning (P ≤ 0.01 to ≤0.000001). Worse academic and social PA were associated with greater severity of psychopathology, cognitive impairment, and real-life functioning impairment (P ≤ 0.000001). Regression analyses showed that worse PA in the academic domain was mainly associated to the impairment of working memory, whereas worse PA in the social domain to avolition (P ≤ 0.000001). Conclusion Our findings suggest that poor early adjustment may represent a marker of vulnerability to schizophrenia and highlight the need for preventive/early interventions based on psychosocial and/or cognitive programs.
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- 2018
18. Catechol-O-Methyltransferase (COMT) Val158Met Polymorphism and Eating Disorders: Data From a New Biobank and Meta-Analysis of Previously Published Studies
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Collantoni, Enrico, Solmi, Marco, Gallicchio, Davide, Santonastaso, Paolo, Meneguzzo, Paolo, Carvalho, Andrè F, Stubbs, Brendon, Clementi, Maurizio, Pinato, Claudia, Forzan, Monica, Cassina, Matteo, Fontana, Francesca, Piva, Ivana, Siani, Roberta, Salvo, Pierandrea, Tenconi, Elena, Veronese, Nicola, Correll, Christoph U, Favaro, Angela, Collantoni, E., Solmi, M., Gallicchio, D., Santonastaso, P., Meneguzzo, P., Carvalho, A.F., Stubbs, B., Clementi, M., Pinato, C., Forzan, M., Cassina, M., Fontana, F., Piva, I., Siani, R., Salvo, P., Tenconi, E., Veronese, N., Correll, C.U., and Favaro, A.
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Anorexia Nervosa ,Genotype ,Val158Met ,Catechol O-Methyltransferase ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) ,polymorphism ,Feeding and Eating Disorders ,Gene Frequency ,Case-Control Studies ,mental disorders ,Journal Article ,Humans ,Bulimia Nervosa ,anorexia nervosa ,bulimia nervosa ,Biological Specimen Banks - Abstract
Objectives: We investigated whether catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) Val158Met polymorphism is associated with eating disorders (EDs). Methods: We conducted a systematic literature search of studies published until 15 January 2017 and added data from the Italian ‘Biobanca Veneta per i Disturbi Alimentari’ biobank, performing a meta-analysis comparing COMT Val158Met genotype and allele frequencies in EDs and anorexia nervosa (AN) or bulimia nervosa (BN) patients versus controls. Results: Ten studies plus Biobanca Veneta per i Disturbi Alimentari (ED: n = 920, controls: n = 261 controls) with 3541 ED patients (AN = 2388; BN = 233) and 3684 controls were included. There were no significant group differences in COMT Val158Met alleles and genotype frequencies between patients and controls, for all EDs pooled together [range of odds ratios (ORs): 0.96–1.04, p-values: 0.46–0.97, I2 = 0%] and when analysing separately patients with AN (ORs: 0.94–1.04, p-values: 0.31–0.61, I2 = 0%) or BN (ORs: 0.80–1.09, p-values: 0.28–0.64, I2 = 0–44%). Conclusions: Meta-analysing data results from 11 studies and 7225 subjects show that COMT Val158Met polymorphism is not associated with EDs. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and Eating Disorders Association. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and Eating Disorders Association.
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- 2017
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19. Prevalence, incidence and mortality from cardiovascular disease in patients with pooled and specific severe mental illness: a large-scale meta-analysis of 3,211,768 patients and 113,383,368 controls
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Francesco Monaco, Davide Gallicchio, Stella Rosson, Christoph U. Correll, Brendon Stubbs, Paolo Santonastaso, Fiona Gaughran, Michele Fornaro, Cristiano A. Köhler, Marco Solmi, Beatrice Bortolato, Nita Thapa-Chhetri, André F. Carvalho, Angela Favaro, Giorgio Pigato, Davy Vancampfort, Nicola Veronese, Philip B. Ward, Enrico Collantoni, Correll, Christoph U, Solmi, Marco, Veronese, Nicola, Bortolato, Beatrice, Rosson, Stella, Santonastaso, Paolo, Thapa-Chhetri, Nita, Fornaro, Michele, Gallicchio, Davide, Collantoni, Enrico, Pigato, Giorgio, Favaro, Angela, Monaco, Francesco, Kohler, Cristiano, Vancampfort, Davy, Ward, Philip B, Gaughran, Fiona, Carvalho, André F, Stubbs, Brendon, Correll, C.U., Solmi, M., Veronese, N., Bortolato, B., Rosson, S., Santonastaso, P., Thapa-Chhetri, N., Fornaro, M., Gallicchio, D., Collantoni, E., Pigato, G., Favaro, A., Monaco, F., Kohler, C., Vancampfort, D., Ward, P.B., Gaughran, F., Carvalho, A.F., and Stubbs, B.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Cardiovascular disease ,bipolar disorder ,cerebrovascular disease ,congestive heart failure ,coronary heart disease ,major depression ,premature mortality ,schizophrenia ,severe mental illness ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Cardiovascular disease, severe mental illness, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depression, coronary heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, congestive heart failure, premature mortality ,Psychiatry ,Framingham Risk Score ,business.industry ,Vascular disease ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Hazard ratio ,Correction ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Heart failure ,Major depressive disorder ,Pshychiatric Mental Health ,business ,Body mass index ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
People with severe mental illness (SMI) – schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and major depressive disorder – appear at risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD), but a comprehensive meta-analysis is lacking. We conducted a large-scale meta-analysis assessing the prevalence and incidence of CVD; coronary heart disease; stroke, transient ischemic attack or cerebrovascular disease; congestive heart failure; peripheral vascular disease; and CVD-related death in SMI patients (N=3,211,768) versus controls (N=113,383,368) (92 studies). The pooled CVD prevalence in SMI patients (mean age 50 years) was 9.9% (95% CI: 7.4-13.3). Adjusting for a median of seven confounders, patients had significantly higher odds of CVD versus controls in cross-sectional studies (odds ratio, OR=1.53, 95% CI: 1.27-1.83; 11 studies), and higher odds of coronary heart disease (OR=1.51, 95% CI: 1.47-1.55) and cerebrovascular disease (OR=1.42, 95% CI: 1.21-1.66). People with major depressive disorder were at increased risk for coronary heart disease, while those with schizophrenia were at increased risk for coronary heart disease, cerebrovascular disease and congestive heart failure. Cumulative CVD incidence in SMI patients was 3.6% (95% CI: 2.7-5.3) during a median follow-up of 8.4 years (range 1.8-30.0). Adjusting for a median of six confounders, SMI patients had significantly higher CVD incidence than controls in longitudinal studies (hazard ratio, HR=1.78, 95% CI: 1.60-1.98; 31 studies). The incidence was also higher for coronary heart disease (HR=1.54, 95% CI: 1.30-1.82), cerebrovascular disease (HR=1.64, 95% CI: 1.26-2.14), congestive heart failure (HR=2.10, 95% CI: 1.64-2.70), and CVD-related death (HR=1.85, 95% CI: 1.53-2.24). People with major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder and schizophrenia were all at increased risk of CVD-related death versus controls. CVD incidence increased with antipsychotic use (p=0.008), higher body mass index (p=0.008) and higher baseline CVD prevalence (p=0.03) in patients vs. controls. Moreover, CVD prevalence (p=0.007), but not CVD incidence (p=0.21), increased in more recently conducted studies. This large-scale meta-analysis confirms that SMI patients have significantly increased risk of CVD and CVD-related mortality, and that elevated body mass index, antipsychotic use, and CVD screening and management require urgent clinical attention. © 2017 World Psychiatric Association
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- 2017
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20. Serotonin transporter gene polymorphism in eating disorders: Data from a new biobank and META-analysis of previous studies
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Marco Solmi, Davide Gallicchio, Pierandrea Salvo, F. Fontana, Monica Forzan, Christoph U. Correll, Paolo Santonastaso, Claudia Pinato, Matteo Cassina, Valeria Giannunzio, R. Siani, Enrico Collantoni, Elena Tenconi, Nicola Veronese, I. Piva, Maurizio Clementi, Angela Favaro, Solmi, M., Gallicchio, D., Collantoni, E., Correll, C.U., Clementi, M., Pinato, C., Forzan, M., Cassina, M., Fontana, F., Giannunzio, V., Piva, I., Siani, R., Salvo, P., Santonastaso, P., Tenconi, E., Veronese, N., and Favaro, A.
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Anorexia Nervosa ,5-HTTLPR ,anorexia nervosa ,binge eating ,bulimia nervosa ,Eating disorders ,Biological Psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental Health ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Gene Frequency ,medicine ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Obesity ,Psychiatry ,Bulimia Nervosa ,Serotonin transporter ,Biological Specimen Banks ,Serotonin Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,biology ,Binge eating ,Bulimia nervosa ,Eating disorder ,medicine.disease ,Biobank ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Meta-analysis ,biology.protein ,Gene polymorphism ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Objectives Growing interest focuses on the association between 5-HTTLPR polymorphism and eating disorders (ED), but published findings have been conflicting. Methods The Italian BIO.VE.D.A. biobank provided 976 samples (735 ED patients and 241 controls) for genotyping. We conducted a literature search of studies published up to 1 April 2015, including studies reporting on 5HTTLPR genotype and allele frequencies in obesity and/or ED. We ran a meta-analysis, including data from BIO.VE.D.A. – comparing low and high-functioning genotype and allele frequencies in ED vs. controls. Results Data from 21 studies, plus BIO.VE.D.A., were extracted providing information from 3,736 patients and 2,707 controls. Neither low- nor high-functioning genotype frequencies in ED patients, with both bi- and tri-allelic models, differed from controls. Furthermore, neither low- nor high-functioning allele frequencies in ED or in BN, in both bi- and triallelic models, differed from control groups. After sensitivity analysis, results were the same in AN vs. controls. Results remained unaltered when investigating recessive and dominant models. Conclusions 5HTTLPR does not seem to be associated with ED in general, or with AN or BN in particular. Future studies in ED should explore the role of ethnicity and psychiatric comorbidity as a possible source of bias. © 2016 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
- Published
- 2016
21. Revealing motor insensitivity to food in Anorexia Nervosa as a potential mechanism contributing to calorie restriction: A mobile Approach Avoidance Task study.
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Meregalli V, Ambrosini E, Granziol U, Zech H, Abbate Daga G, Martini M, Sala A, Ceccato E, Tenconi E, Cardi V, Meneguzzo P, Favaro A, and Collantoni E
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- Humans, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Adolescent, Avoidance Learning, Smartphone, Case-Control Studies, Energy Intake, Anorexia Nervosa psychology, Caloric Restriction psychology, Caloric Restriction methods, Feeding Behavior psychology
- Abstract
A change in implicit behavioural tendencies toward foods may contribute to the maintenance of calorie restriction in Anorexia Nervosa (AN). To test this hypothesis, we assessed approach-avoidance tendencies toward different categories of stimuli using a novel mobile version of the approach-avoidance task (AAT). The sample included 66 patients with restrictive AN and 84 healthy controls, all females. All participants performed the AAT in which they were required to approach or avoid stimuli (high-calorie foods, low-calorie foods, and neutral objects) by respectively pulling their phone towards themselves of pushing it away. Both the response time and the force of each movement were collected by means of the smartphone's accelerometer. The results revealed that patients with AN had a reduced tendency to approach food stimuli compared to healthy controls, who instead presented faster and stronger movements in approaching rather than avoiding foods as compared to neutral objects. This finding was particularly pronounced in patients with greater levels of malnutrition. No differences were instead observed comparing high-calorie and low-calorie foods. The observed reduction in the natural tendency to approach food stimuli is consistent with patients' eating behaviour and may contribute to the maintenance of calorie restriction, thus representing a possible target for novel therapeutic approaches., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors have no competing financial interests to declare., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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22. Dissecting implicit food-related behaviors in Binge Eating Disorder and obesity: insights from a mobile approach-avoidance framework.
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Collantoni E, Meregalli V, Granziol U, Di Vincenzo A, Rossato M, Giovannini S, Capobianco E, Zech H, Vettor R, and Favaro A
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Introduction: Bulimic episodes experienced by patients with Binge Eating Disorder (BED) might be sustained by an enhanced behavioral propensity to approach food stimuli., Methods: To test this hypothesis, automatic approach avoidance tendencies toward high-calorie foods (HCF), low-calorie foods (LCF), and neutral objects were assessed in a group of 23 patients with BED, and their performance was compared to the one of 17 patients with obesity without BED and a group of 32 normal weight participants. All participants performed a mobile approach-avoidance task in which they were required to approach and avoid different stimuli by respectively pulling their phone toward themselves or pushing it away. Reaction times were analyzed., Results: Results showed a significant three-way interaction between group, type of movement and stimulus. Post-hoc analyses revealed that all the groups displayed an approach bias toward HCF. Patients with BED and healthy controls also displayed an approach bias toward LCF, a bias that was absent in obese individuals without BED. Moreover, patients with BED were faster in approaching food stimuli, both HCF and LCF, compared to healthy controls., Discussion: These behavioral tendencies are quite consistent with the real-life attitudes of both BED patients and patients with obesity and might contribute to the maintenance of unhealthy eating habits such as binging in patients with BED and high-calorie diets in patients with obesity., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Collantoni, Meregalli, Granziol, Di Vincenzo, Rossato, Giovannini, Capobianco, Zech, Vettor and Favaro.)
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- 2024
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23. Genetic determinants of coping, resilience and self-esteem in schizophrenia suggest a primary role for social factors and hippocampal neurogenesis.
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Mazzarotto F, Monteleone P, Minelli A, Mattevi S, Cascino G, Rocca P, Rossi A, Bertolino A, Aguglia E, Altamura C, Amore M, Bellomo A, Bucci P, Collantoni E, Dell'Osso L, Di Fabio F, Fagiolini A, Giuliani L, Marchesi C, Martinotti G, Montemagni C, Pinna F, Pompili M, Rampino A, Roncone R, Siracusano A, Vita A, Zeppegno P, Galderisi S, Gennarelli M, and Maj M
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Middle Aged, Schizophrenic Psychology, MicroRNAs genetics, Self Concept, Resilience, Psychological, Schizophrenia genetics, Adaptation, Psychological physiology, Neurogenesis physiology, Hippocampus, Genome-Wide Association Study
- Abstract
Schizophrenia is a severe psychiatric disorder, associated with a reduction in life expectancy of 15-20 years. Available treatments are at least partially effective in most affected individuals, and personal resources such as resilience (successful adaptation despite adversity) and coping abilities (strategies used to deal with stressful or threatening situations), are important determinants of disease outcomes and long-term sustained recovery. Published findings support the existence of a genetic background underlying resilience and coping, with variable heritability estimates. However, genome-wide analyses concerning the genetic determinants of these personal resources, especially in the context of schizophrenia, are lacking. Here, we performed a genome-wide association study coupled with accessory analyses to investigate potential genetic determinants of resilience, coping and self-esteem in 490 schizophrenia patients. Results revealed a complex genetic background partly overlapping with that of neuroticism, worry and schizophrenia itself and support the importance of social aspects in shapingthese psychological constructs. Hippocampal neurogenesis and lipid metabolism appear to be potentially relevant biological underpinnings, and specific miRNAs such as miR-124 and miR-137 may warrant further studies as potential biomarkers. In conclusion, this study represents an important first step in the identification of genetic and biological correlates shaping resilience, coping resources and self-esteem in schizophrenia., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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24. Virtual reality assessment of a high-calorie food bias: Replication and food-specificity in healthy participants.
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Schroeder PA, Collantoni E, Lohmann J, Butz MV, and Plewnia C
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Hand Strength physiology, Cues, Movement physiology, Virtual Reality, Food
- Abstract
Background: Theoretical models and behavioural studies indicate faster approach behaviour for high-calorie food (approach bias) among healthy participants. A previous study with Virtual Reality (VR) and online motion-capture quantified this approach bias towards food and non-food cues in a controlled VR environment with hand movements. The aim of this study was to test the specificity of a manual approach bias for high-calorie food in grasp movements compared to low-calorie food and neutral objects of different complexity, namely, simple balls and geometrically more complex office tools., Methods: In a VR setting, healthy participants (N = 27) repeatedly grasped or pushed high-calorie food, low-calorie food, balls and office tools in randomized order with 30 item repetitions. All objects were rated for valence and arousal., Results: High-calorie food was less attractive and more arousing in subjective ratings than low-calorie food and neutral objects. Movement onset was faster for high-calorie food in push-trials, but overall push responses were comparable. In contrast, responses to high-calorie food relative to low-calorie food and to control objects were faster in grasp trials for later stages of interaction (grasp and collect). Non-parametric tests confirmed an approach bias for high-calorie food., Conclusion: A behavioural bias for food was specific to high-calorie food objects. The results confirm the presence of bottom-up advantages in motor-cognitive behaviour for high-calorie food in a non-clinical population. More systematic variations of object fidelity and in clinical populations are outstanding. The utility of VR in assessing approach behaviour is confirmed in this study by exploring manual interactions in a controlled environment., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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25. Intra-individual cortical networks in Anorexia Nervosa: Evidence from a longitudinal dataset.
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Collantoni E, Alberti F, Dahmen B, von Polier G, Konrad K, Herpertz-Dahlmann B, Favaro A, and Seitz J
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- Adolescent, Humans, Female, Cerebral Cortex diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Cortex pathology, Body Mass Index, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Weight Gain, Anorexia Nervosa diagnostic imaging, Anorexia Nervosa pathology
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Objective: This work investigates cortical thickness (CT) and gyrification patterns in Anorexia Nervosa (AN) before and after short-term weight restoration using graph theory tools., Methods: 38 female adolescents with AN underwent structural magnetic resonance imaging scans at baseline and after - on average - 3.5 months following short-term weight restoration while 53 age-matched healthy controls (HCs) were scanned once. Graph measures were compared between groups and longitudinally within the AN group. Associations with clinical measures such as age of onset, duration of illness, BMI standard deviation score (BMI-SDS), and longitudinal weight changes were tested via stepwise regression., Results: Cortical thickness graphs of patients with acute AN displayed lower modularity and small-world index (SWI) than HCs. Modularity recovered after weight gain. Reduced global efficiency and SWI were observed in patients at baseline compared to HCs based on gyrification networks. Significant associations between local clustering of CT at admission and BMI-SDS, and clustering/global efficiency of gyrification and duration of illness emerged., Conclusions: Our results indicate a shift towards less organised CT networks in patients with acute AN. After weight recovery, the disarrangement seems to be partially reduced. However, longer-term follow-ups are needed to determine whether cortical organizational patterns fully return to normal., (© 2023 The Authors. European Eating Disorders Review published by Eating Disorders Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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26. Persistent avoidance of virtual food in anorexia nervosa-restrictive type: Results from motion tracking in a virtual stopping task.
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Schroeder PA, Collantoni E, Meregalli V, Rabarbari E, Simonazzi C, Svaldi J, and Cardi V
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- Humans, Food, Habits, Attention, Avoidance Learning physiology, Anorexia Nervosa therapy
- Abstract
Objective: Food avoidance is central to patients with anorexia nervosa-restrictive type (AN-R). Competing accounts in experimental psychopathology research suggest that food avoidance may result from automatic, habitual responses or from elevated inhibitory control abilities. This study investigated behavioral trajectories of food avoidance in a novel virtual reality stopping task., Method: Sixty patients with AN-R and 29 healthy controls with normal weight were investigated using a novel, kinematic task in virtual reality. We recorded spatial displacement in stop- and go-trials to virtual food and control objects. Inhibitory control abilities were operationalized by the VR task in stopping performance (i.e., interrupted movement in stop-trials), whereas we also measured habitual avoidance of virtual food across both go- and stop-trials (i.e., delayed movement relative to nonfood objects)., Results: In patients with AN-R, hand displacements were shorter to food versus nonfood across stop- and go-trials, reflected in a Stimulus × Group interaction. Healthy controls showed no differences. Importantly, the food-specific effect in AN-R was identical across stop- and go-trials, indicating habitual food avoidance. Moreover, stop error rates (i.e., stop-trials with response) were lower in patients with AN-R., Discussion: The findings suggest food-specific habitual avoidance and heightened generalized inhibitory control in AN-R. The continuously delayed displacements during active hand movements across stop- and go-trials indicated the persistence of patients' avoidance of food., Public Significance: Experimental research investigates the mechanisms underlying mental disorders such as anorexia nervosa. In this study, we measured interrupted hand movements in response to food pictures or neutral pictures (shoes) in patients with anorexia nervosa and healthy controls. A virtual reality scenario was used. Findings indicated that patients were slower at approaching food, interrupted or not. Key mechanisms of food avoidance can be translated into habit-based treatment options in future research., (© 2024 The Authors. International Journal of Eating Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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27. Virtual food exposure with positive mood induction or social support to reduce food anxiety in anorexia nervosa: A feasibility study.
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Natali L, Meregalli V, Rowlands K, Di Pietro J, Treasure J, Collantoni E, Meneguzzo P, Tenconi E, Favaro A, Fontana F, Ceccato E, Sala A, Valmaggia L, and Cardi V
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- Humans, Feasibility Studies, Anxiety etiology, Anxiety therapy, Anxiety psychology, Emotions, Social Support, Anorexia Nervosa therapy, Anorexia Nervosa psychology
- Abstract
Objective: Aversive emotions toward food and the consequences of eating are at the core of anorexia nervosa. Exposure therapy is effective to reduce anxiety and avoidance toward feared stimuli. Based on the inhibitory learning framework, this study examined the feasibility to induce social support or positive mood to enhance the impact of a single session virtual food exposure on food-related anxiety in anorexia nervosa., Method: One hundred and forty-five patients were randomized to: (1) virtual food exposure (i.e., baseline condition), (2) virtual food exposure plus positive mood induction (i.e., positive mood condition), or (3) virtual food exposure plus social support (i.e., social support condition). They completed self-report assessments of anxiety toward virtual foods, general anxiety, positive mood, social support, and hunger, before and after virtual food exposure. Number of eye gazes and touches toward foods were recorded during the virtual reality exposure., Results: Patients had lower levels of anxiety toward virtual foods in the positive mood condition, compared to the baseline condition [F
(2,141) = 4.36, p = .015; medium effect size]. They also touched food items more often in the baseline condition. No other significant changes were found., Discussion: Virtual food exposure enhanced by positive mood induction seems a feasible approach to strengthen the impact of food exposure in anorexia nervosa., Public Significance: This research contributes to the understanding of how patients with anorexia nervosa can be supported to overcome fear and anxiety around food. Virtual reality enables patients to expose themselves to difficult situations (e.g., kitchen with foods of various calorie contents) while experiencing positive stimuli, such as a loving and kind pet or a supportive avatar., (© 2024 The Authors. International Journal of Eating Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)- Published
- 2024
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28. Outcomes in people with eating disorders: a transdiagnostic and disorder-specific systematic review, meta-analysis and multivariable meta-regression analysis.
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Solmi M, Monaco F, Højlund M, Monteleone AM, Trott M, Firth J, Carfagno M, Eaton M, De Toffol M, Vergine M, Meneguzzo P, Collantoni E, Gallicchio D, Stubbs B, Girardi A, Busetto P, Favaro A, Carvalho AF, Steinhausen HC, and Correll CU
- Abstract
Eating disorders (EDs) are known to be associated with high mortality and often chronic and severe course, but a recent comprehensive systematic review of their outcomes is currently missing. In the present systematic review and meta-analysis, we examined cohort studies and clinical trials published between 1980 and 2021 that reported, for DSM/ICD-defined EDs, overall ED outcomes (i.e., recovery, improvement and relapse, all-cause and ED-related hospitalization, and chronicity); the same outcomes related to purging, binge eating and body weight status; as well as mortality. We included 415 studies (N=88,372, mean age: 25.7±6.9 years, females: 72.4%, mean follow-up: 38.3±76.5 months), conducted in persons with anorexia nervosa (AN), bulimia nervosa (BN), binge eating disorder (BED), other specified feeding and eating disorders (OSFED), and/or mixed EDs, from all continents except Africa. In all EDs pooled together, overall recovery occurred in 46% of patients (95% CI: 44-49, n=283, mean follow-up: 44.9±62.8 months, no significant ED-group difference). The recovery rate was 42% at <2 years, 43% at 2 to <4 years, 54% at 4 to <6 years, 59% at 6 to <8 years, 64% at 8 to <10 years, and 67% at ≥10 years. Overall chronicity occurred in 25% of patients (95% CI: 23-29, n=170, mean follow-up: 59.3±71.2 months, no significant ED-group difference). The chronicity rate was 33% at <2 years, 40% at 2 to <4 years, 23% at 4 to <6 years, 25% at 6 to <8 years, 12% at 8 to <10 years, and 18% at ≥10 years. Mortality occurred in 0.4% of patients (95% CI: 0.2-0.7, n=214, mean follow-up: 72.2±117.7 months, no significant ED-group difference). Considering observational studies, the mortality rate was 5.2 deaths/1,000 person-years (95% CI: 4.4-6.1, n=167, mean follow-up: 88.7±120.5 months; significant difference among EDs: p<0.01, range: from 8.2 for mixed ED to 3.4 for BN). Hospitalization occurred in 26% of patients (95% CI: 18-36, n=18, mean follow-up: 43.2±41.6 months; significant difference among EDs: p<0.001, range: from 32% for AN to 4% for BN). Regarding diagnostic migration, 8% of patients with AN migrated to BN and 16% to OSFED; 2% of patients with BN migrated to AN, 5% to BED, and 19% to OSFED; 9% of patients with BED migrated to BN and 19% to OSFED; 7% of patients with OSFED migrated to AN and 10% to BN. Children/adolescents had more favorable outcomes across and within EDs than adults. Self-injurious behaviors were associated with lower recovery rates in pooled EDs. A higher socio-demographic index moderated lower recovery and higher chronicity in AN across countries. Specific treatments associated with higher recovery rates were family-based therapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), psychodynamic therapy, and nutritional interventions for AN; self-help, CBT, dialectical behavioral therapy (DBT), psychodynamic therapy, nutritional and pharmacological treatments for BN; CBT, nutritional and pharmacological interventions, and DBT for BED; and CBT and psychodynamic therapy for OSFED. In AN, pharmacological treatment was associated with lower recovery, and waiting list with higher mortality. These results should inform future research, clinical practice and health service organization for persons with EDs., (© 2024 World Psychiatric Association.)
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- 2024
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29. The Psychological and Medical Landscape of Anorexia Nervosa over a Decade: A Retrospective Study of Possible Physical and Psychological Shifts.
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Meneguzzo P, Di Pascoli L, Bindolo MC, Collantoni E, Meregalli V, Zanetti T, Veronese A, Tenconi E, and Favaro A
- Abstract
In recent years, the definition, clinical characteristics, and psychological aspects of anorexia nervosa (AN) have undergone notable changes, influenced by various factors such as biology, psychology, and the environment. The COVID-19 pandemic is one such external factor that has been preliminarily identified as affecting the clinical presentation of AN. This study specifically aims to assess the alterations in psychological and medical features observed in individuals with AN during the pandemic. This study is a retrospective case review of 252 people diagnosed with AN from two different cohorts: 2010-2012 and 2021. A comparison of psychological and medical data was conducted to identify specific differences in the initial clinical evaluation. Additionally, different effects of the pandemic on age cohorts were assessed, with a focus on distinctions between adolescents and adults. Results revealed that the pandemic cohort had a higher number of new cases, with patients being younger and experiencing more severe psychological symptoms. Hospitalization rates upon first access were also elevated, but no significant differences in medical values were observed. Adolescents during the pandemic showed increased episodes of binge eating, decreased obsessive-compulsive symptoms, and greater difficulty in interoceptive awareness. This study reveals distinct differences in symptomatology among patients, with a particular focus on psychological characteristics such as impulsive behaviors and interoceptive awareness. These behavioral and interoceptive changes could have potential considerations in the treatment pathway. Further investigations are warranted to gain a deeper understanding of the evolving clinical presentation of anorexia nervosa after the pandemic.
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- 2023
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30. Strategic avoidance of food stimuli in patients with restrictive anorexia nervosa: An eye-tracking evaluation.
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Meregalli V, Tenconi E, Cardi V, Bonifanti A, Meneguzzo P, Favaro A, and Collantoni E
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Objective: A biased attentional processing of food stimuli may represent a disorder maintenance factor in patients with anorexia nervosa (AN). The present study aimed at investigating the temporal course of attentional deployment towards both high-calorie and low-calorie foods in patients with AN using eye-tracking., Method: Fifty-two patients with restrictive AN and 54 healthy controls (HC) performed a dot-probe task while their gaze was recorded with an eye-tracking system. The direction bias (percentage of trials in which the gaze was directed towards the food at first fixation, 500, and 1500 ms), and the duration bias (percentage of time spent looking at the food) were extracted., Results: Regarding the direction bias, a group by time interaction emerged (F = 3.29, p = 0.038): while in the control group the bias continued to increase over the course of the trial, patients with AN showed a reduction of the bias between the 500 and 1500 ms. No group differences were observed on the duration bias., Conclusions: In advanced stages of attentional deployment patients with AN start to differ from HC by diverting their attention away from food stimuli, a strategic process that may contribute to food avoidance and calorie restriction., (© 2023 The Authors. European Eating Disorders Review published by Eating Disorders Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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31. Linguistic embodiment in typical and atypical anorexia nervosa: Evidence from an image-word matching task.
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Meneguzzo P, Dal Brun D, Collantoni E, Meregalli V, Todisco P, Favaro A, and Tenconi E
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- Humans, Female, Thinness, Cognition, Brain, Linguistics, Anorexia Nervosa psychology
- Abstract
Objective: The integration of sensory, motor, and cognitive systems is embodied cognition, according to which mind and body are not separate and distinct, and our body (and our brain, as part of the body) contributes to determining our mental and cognitive processes. In spite of limited data available, Anorexia nervosa (AN) appears as a condition in which embodied cognition is altered, in particular, if we consider bodily sensations and visuospatial information processing. We aimed to evaluate the ability to correctly identify body parts and actions in both full (AN) and atypical AN (AAN), looking at the role of the underweight status., Method: A group of 143 females (AN = 45, AAN = 43, unaffected women = 55) was enrolled. All participants performed a linguistic embodied task to evaluate the association between a picture-showing a bodily action-and a written verb. Additionally, a subsample of 24 AN participants performed a retest after stable weight recovery., Results: Both AN and AAN demonstrated an abnormal ability to evaluate the picture-written verb associations, especially if the involved bodily effectors were the same in both stimuli (i.e., pictorial and verbal) and needed a longer response time., Conclusions: Specific embodied cognition linked to body schema seems to be impaired in persons with AN. The longitudinal analysis showed a difference between AN and AAN only in the underweight condition, suggesting the presence of an abnormal linguistic embodiment. More attention should be devoted to embodiment during AN treatment to improve bodily cognition, which might, in turn, diminish body misperception., (© 2023 The Authors. European Eating Disorders Review published by Eating Disorders Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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32. Food induced distractibility in restrictive anorexia nervosa: Different motor patterns for different foods as revealed by a mouse tracker evaluation.
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Meregalli V, Ambrosini E, Tenconi E, Schroeder PA, Cardi V, Veronese A, Meneguzzo P, Favaro A, and Collantoni E
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- Animals, Mice, Food, Feeding Behavior physiology, Energy Intake physiology, Reaction Time, Anorexia Nervosa
- Abstract
An altered automatic processing of food stimuli may contribute to the maintenance of calorie restriction in patients with restrictive Anorexia Nervosa (AN-R). The present study aimed to assess whether task-irrelevant food distractors elicited a different interference effect in the motor actions of patients with AN-R compared to healthy controls (HC). 40 patients with acute AN-R and 40 HC performed an irrelevant distractor task in which they were required to perform a reaching movement from a starting point to a green dot, while an irrelevant distractor (a high-calorie food, low-calorie food, or neutral object) was presented in the middle of the screen. Mouse trajectories and response times (RT) were recorded. The analyses conducted on the kinematic variables revealed that while the trajectories of HC veered similarly toward the three categories of stimuli, AN-R patients showed an increased deviation toward low-calorie foods and a reduced deviation toward high-calorie foods compared to neutral objects. No significant results emerged as regards RT. The pattern of responses observed in patients with AN-R (deviation increased toward low-calorie and reduced toward high-calorie) is consistent with their eating habits and may thus represent an implicit mechanism sustaining calorie restriction in patients with AN-R., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors have no conflict of interest to declare., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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33. Easy to get, difficult to avoid: Behavioral tendencies toward high-calorie and low-calorie food during a mobile approach-avoidance task interact with body mass index and hunger in a community sample.
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Collantoni E, Meregalli V, Granziol U, Gerunda C, Zech H, Schroeder PA, Tenconi E, Cardi V, Meneguzzo P, Martini M, Marzola E, Abbate-Daga G, and Favaro A
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- Humans, Body Mass Index, Food Preferences, Reaction Time, Hunger, Food
- Abstract
In recent years, different studies highlighted the importance of assessing behavioral tendencies toward different food stimuli in healthy and pathological samples. However, heterogeneities in experimental approaches and small sample sizes make this literature rather inconsistent. In this study, we used a mobile approach-avoidance task to investigate the behavioral tendencies toward healthy and unhealthy foods compared to neutral objects in a large community sample. The role of some contextual and stable subjective variables was also explored. The sample included 204 participants. The stimuli comprised 15 pictures of unhealthy foods, 15 pictures of healthy foods, and 15 pictures of neutral objects. Participants were required to approach or avoid stimuli by respectively pull or push the smartphone toward or away from themselves. Accuracy and reaction time of each movement were calculated. The analyses were conducted using a generalized linear mixed-effect model (GLMMs), testing the two-way interaction between the type of movement and the stimulus category and the three-way interactions between type of movement, stimulus, and specific variables (BMI, time passed since the last meal, level of perceived hunger). Our results evidenced faster approaching movement toward food stimuli but not toward neutrals. An effect of BMI was also documented: as the BMI increased, participants became slower in avoiding unhealthy compared to healthy foods, and in approaching healthy compared to unhealthy stimuli. Moreover, as hunger increased, participants became faster in approaching and slower in avoiding healthy compared to unhealthy stimuli. In conclusion, our results show an approach tendency toward food stimuli, independent from caloric content, in the general population. Furthermore, approach tendencies to healthy foods decreased with increasing BMI and increased with perceived hunger, indicating the possible influence of different mechanisms on eating-related behavioral tendencies., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors have no competing interests to declare., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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34. Volume and complexity of the thalamus in Anorexia Nervosa: An exploratory evaluation.
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Collantoni E, Meregalli V, Manara R, Meneguzzo P, Tenconi E, and Favaro A
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- Humans, Female, Thalamus diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Cognition, Anorexia Nervosa diagnostic imaging, Malnutrition
- Abstract
Objective: Recent neuroscientific findings have highlighted the role of the thalamus in several cognitive functions, ranging from perception to cognitive flexibility, memory, and body representation. Since some of these functions may be involved in the pathophysiology of Anorexia Nervosa (AN), this study aims at exploring thalamic structure in different phases of the disorder., Method: The sample included 38 patients with acute AN, 20 patients who fully recovered from AN (recAN), and 38 healthy controls (HC), all female. All participants underwent high-resolution MRI. The volumes of the whole thalamus and 25 thalamic nuclei were extracted using an automated segmentation algorithm, and thalamic fractal dimension was estimated using the calcFD toolbox., Results: Patients with acute AN, compared to HC, displayed reduced thalamic volume and complexity both at the whole level and at the level of specific nuclei. In patients recAN, instead, alterations were observed only at the level of the right laterodorsal and central lateral nuclei., Conclusions: In the acute phase of the disorder patients with AN present a widespread reduction in thalamic volume and complexity. However, these alterations seem to normalise almost completely following weight restoration, thus suggesting the involvement of malnutrition-related mechanisms., (© 2022 Eating Disorders Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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35. Belief Inflexibility and Cognitive Biases in Anorexia Nervosa-The Role of the Bias against Disconfirmatory Evidence and Its Clinical and Neuropsychological Correlates.
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Tenconi E, Meregalli V, Buffa A, Collantoni E, Cavallaro R, Meneguzzo P, and Favaro A
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to explore, in a sample of patients with a diagnosis of AN, the ability to question their first impression and, in particular, the willingness to integrate their prior ideas and thoughts with additional progressive incoming information. A total of 45 healthy women and 103 patients with a diagnosis of AN, consecutively admitted to the Eating Disorder Padova Hospital-University Unit, underwent a broad clinical and neuropsychological assessment. All participants were administered the Bias Against Disconfirmatory Evidence (BADE) task, which specifically investigates belief integration cognitive bias. Acute AN patients showed a significantly greater bias toward disconfirming their previous judgment, in comparison to healthy women (BADE score, respectively, 2.5 ± 2.0 vs. 3.3 ± 1.6; Mann-Whitney test, p = 0.012). A binge-eating/purging subtype of AN individuals, compared to restrictive AN patients and controls, showed greater disconfirmatory bias and also a significant propensity to uncritically accept implausible interpretations (BADE score, respectively, 1.55 ± 1.6 and 2.70 ± 1.97 vs. 3.33 ± 1.63; Kruskal-Wallis test, p = 0.002 and liberal acceptance score, respectively, 1.32 ± 0.93 and 0.92 ± 1.21 vs. 0.98 ± 0.75; Kruskal-Wallis test p = 0.03). Abstract thinking skills and cognitive flexibility, as well as high central coherence, are neuropsychological aspects positively correlated with cognitive bias, in both patients and controls. Research into belief integration bias in AN population could enable us to shed light on hidden dimensional aspects, facilitating a better understanding of the psychopathology of a disorder that is so complex and difficult to treat.
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- 2023
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36. Virtual Rejection and Overinclusion in Eating Disorders: An Experimental Investigation of the Impact on Emotions, Stress Perception, and Food Attitudes.
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Meneguzzo P, Meregalli V, Collantoni E, Cardi V, Tenconi E, and Favaro A
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- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Attitude, Emotions, Perception, Anorexia Nervosa psychology, Binge-Eating Disorder psychology, Bulimia Nervosa psychology, Cognition Disorders, Feeding and Eating Disorders
- Abstract
(1) Background: the investigation of how interpersonal functioning affects eating psychopathology has been receiving increasing attention in the last decade. This study evaluates the impact of virtual social inclusion or ostracism on emotions, perceived stress, eating psychopathology, and the drive to binge or restrict in patients across the eating disorder spectrum. (2) Methods: a group of 122 adolescent and adult females with different eating disorder diagnoses were compared to 50 healthy peers with regards to their performance on, and responses to the Cyberball task, a virtual ball-tossing game. Each participant was randomly assigned to playing a social inclusion or a social exclusion block of the Cyberball task and completed self-report assessments of emotions, perceived stress and urge to restrict/binge before and after the task. (3) Results: patients with anorexia nervosa showed a more negative impact on psychological well-being evaluated with the need threat scale after the excluding block, while patients with bulimia nervosa reported more negative effects after the overincluding condition. Patients with binge eating disorder showed a reduction in specific negative emotions after the overincluding block, unlike all other participants. (4) Conclusions: findings show significant correlations between restraint thoughts in patients with bulimia nervosa and binge thoughts in patients with binge eating disorder after being exposed to the inclusion condition. Different reactions in cognitive and emotional states of patients with eating disorders after different interpersonal scenarios confirm the impact of inclusive or exclusive relationships on eating psychopathology, with specific and different responses across the eating disorder spectrum, that have been discussed, linked to their eating behavioral cognition.
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- 2023
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37. Beyond body image: what body schema and motor imagery can tell us about the way patients with anorexia nervosa experience their body.
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Meregalli V, Tenconi E, Madan CR, Somà E, Meneguzzo P, Ceccato E, Zuanon S, Sala A, Favaro A, and Collantoni E
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- Humans, Body Image, Imagination, Anorexia, Intelligence Tests, Anorexia Nervosa
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Aim: Recent evidence suggests that the body image disturbance often observed in patients with anorexia nervosa also extends to the body schema. According to the embodiment approach, the body schema is not only involved in motor execution, but also in tasks that only require a mental simulation of a movement such as motor imagery, mental rotation of bodies, and visuospatial perspective-taking. The aim of the present study was to assess the ability of patients with anorexia to mentally simulate movements., Methods: The sample included 52 patients with acute anorexia and 62 healthy controls. All participants completed three tests of explicit motor imagery, a mental rotation test and a test of visuospatial perspective-taking., Results: Patients with anorexia nervosa, with respect to controls, reported greater difficulties in imagining movements according to a first-person perspective, lower accuracy in motor imagery, selective impairment in the mental rotation of human figures, and reduced ability in assuming a different egocentric visuospatial perspective., Conclusion: These results are indicative of a specific alteration in motor imagery in patients with anorexia nervosa. Interestingly, patients' difficulties appear to be limited to those tasks which specifically rely on the body schema, while patients and controls performed similarly in the 3D objects mental rotation task., (© 2022 The Authors. Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences © 2022 Japanese Society of Psychiatry and Neurology.)
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- 2023
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38. Brain gyrification in bipolar disorder: a systematic review of neuroimaging studies.
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Miola A, Cattarinussi G, Loré ML, Ghiotto N, Collantoni E, and Sambataro F
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- Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Brain diagnostic imaging, Neuroimaging, Bipolar Disorder, Schizophrenia
- Abstract
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a severe mental illness with a strong genetic component. Genetic variations have been involved in the risk of this disorder, including those mediating brain function and neurodevelopment. Early neurodevelopment and neuroprogression processes could be reflected in brain gyrification patterns and help optimize the prediction and diagnosis of such disorders that is often delayed. Previous neuroimaging studies using this measure in patients with bipolar disorder revealed controversial results. This systematic review aimed to summarize available neuroimaging investigations on gyrification in BD compared to healthy controls (HC) and/or other psychiatric groups. Fourteen studies including 733 patients with BD, 585 patients with schizophrenia (SCZ), 90 with schizoaffective disorder (SZA), and 1380 healthy subjects were identified. Overall, a heterogeneous pattern of gyrification emerged between patients with BD and HC. Interestingly, increased gyrification or no differences were also observed in patients with BD compared to those with the schizophrenia-spectrum disorders. Furthermore, relatives of patients with BD showed lower or no differences in gyrification compared to healthy subjects without a family history of affective illness. Differences in the design and in methodological approaches could have contributed to the heterogeneity of the findings. The current review supports an altered brain gyrification pattern that underlies the pathophysiology of BD spanning large anatomical and functional neural networks, associated with altered cognitive functioning, difficulties in processing and affective regulation, and clinical symptoms. Longitudinal studies are needed to test different bipolar phenotypes and pharmacological effects on gyrification., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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39. Brain Structure in Acutely Underweight and Partially Weight-Restored Individuals With Anorexia Nervosa: A Coordinated Analysis by the ENIGMA Eating Disorders Working Group.
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Walton E, Bernardoni F, Batury VL, Bahnsen K, Larivière S, Abbate-Daga G, Andres-Perpiña S, Bang L, Bischoff-Grethe A, Brooks SJ, Campbell IC, Cascino G, Castro-Fornieles J, Collantoni E, D'Agata F, Dahmen B, Danner UN, Favaro A, Feusner JD, Frank GKW, Friederich HC, Graner JL, Herpertz-Dahlmann B, Hess A, Horndasch S, Kaplan AS, Kaufmann LK, Kaye WH, Khalsa SS, LaBar KS, Lavagnino L, Lazaro L, Manara R, Miles AE, Milos GF, Monteleone AM, Monteleone P, Mwangi B, O'Daly O, Pariente J, Roesch J, Schmidt UH, Seitz J, Shott ME, Simon JJ, Smeets PAM, Tamnes CK, Tenconi E, Thomopoulos SI, van Elburg AA, Voineskos AN, von Polier GG, Wierenga CE, Zucker NL, Jahanshad N, King JA, Thompson PM, Berner LA, and Ehrlich S
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- Brain diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Cortex diagnostic imaging, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Prospective Studies, Thinness, Anorexia Nervosa diagnostic imaging, Anorexia Nervosa therapy
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Background: The pattern of structural brain abnormalities in anorexia nervosa (AN) is still not well understood. While several studies report substantial deficits in gray matter volume and cortical thickness in acutely underweight patients, others find no differences, or even increases in patients compared with healthy control subjects. Recent weight regain before scanning may explain some of this heterogeneity. To clarify the extent, magnitude, and dependencies of gray matter changes in AN, we conducted a prospective, coordinated meta-analysis of multicenter neuroimaging data., Methods: We analyzed T1-weighted structural magnetic resonance imaging scans assessed with standardized methods from 685 female patients with AN and 963 female healthy control subjects across 22 sites worldwide. In addition to a case-control comparison, we conducted a 3-group analysis comparing healthy control subjects with acutely underweight AN patients (n = 466) and partially weight-restored patients in treatment (n = 251)., Results: In AN, reductions in cortical thickness, subcortical volumes, and, to a lesser extent, cortical surface area were sizable (Cohen's d up to 0.95), widespread, and colocalized with hub regions. Highlighting the effects of undernutrition, these deficits were associated with lower body mass index in the AN sample and were less pronounced in partially weight-restored patients., Conclusions: The effect sizes observed for cortical thickness deficits in acute AN are the largest of any psychiatric disorder investigated in the ENIGMA (Enhancing Neuro Imaging Genetics through Meta Analysis) Consortium to date. These results confirm the importance of considering weight loss and renutrition in biomedical research on AN and underscore the importance of treatment engagement to prevent potentially long-lasting structural brain changes in this population., (Copyright © 2022 Society of Biological Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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40. Evolution of antipsychotic-induced extrapyramidal symptoms in patients with schizophrenia in the real-life: A 4-year follow-up naturalistic study.
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Monteleone P, Cascino G, Rossi A, Rocca P, Bertolino A, Aguglia E, Amore M, Andriola I, Bellomo A, Biondi M, Brasso C, Carpiniello B, Collantoni E, Dell'Osso L, di Giannantonio M, Fabrazzo M, Fagiolini A, Giordano GM, Marcatili M, Marchesi C, Monteleone AM, Pompili M, Roncone R, Siracusano A, Vita A, Zeppegno P, Galderisi S, and Maj M
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- Humans, Follow-Up Studies, Antipsychotic Agents adverse effects, Schizophrenia epidemiology
- Abstract
Previous studies have shown, although not consistently, that first generation antipsychotics (FGA) are associated with a prevalence of extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS) higher than second generation antipsychotics (SGA). We assessed the prevalence and the incidence of antipsychotic-induced EPS in a large sample of community-dwelling Italian persons with schizophrenia before and after a 4-year naturalistic treatment, to shed light on their natural evolution and to identify possible predicting factors. EPS and psychopathology were assessed in 571 subjects with schizophrenia before (baseline) and after 4-year follow-up. Patients underwent treatment with SGA and/or FGA according to the referring clinicians' judgment. Relationships between EPS and psychopathology were assessed by network analysis, while a linear multiple regression investigated factors correlated to the presence of EPS at follow-up. EPS were significantly more frequent in the FGA- than in the SGA-treated group, and patients with EPS presented a more severe psychopathology. Parkinsonism was directly and positively connected with poor emotional expression at baseline and with poor emotional expression and disorganization at follow-up. Over the 4-year follow-up, emergent EPS were more frequent in FGA-treated patients, while relieved EPS occurred more frequently in SGA-treated persons. The presence of EPS at follow-up was significantly associated with EPS at baseline, illness duration, antipsychotic generation and the daily dose of antipsychotic medications. After a 4-year naturalistic treatment, EPS disappeared more frequently in SGA-treated patients, while they emerged more frequently in FGA-treated individuals. Therefore, although SGA did not eliminate the risk of EPS, these drugs seem to be associated to a more favorable EPS natural evolution., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2022
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41. Brain stimulation and other biological non-pharmacological interventions in mental disorders: An umbrella review.
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Rosson S, de Filippis R, Croatto G, Collantoni E, Pallottino S, Guinart D, Brunoni AR, Dell'Osso B, Pigato G, Hyde J, Brandt V, Cortese S, Fiedorowicz JG, Petrides G, Correll CU, and Solmi M
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- Brain physiology, Humans, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation methods, Mental Disorders therapy, Schizophrenia, Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation methods
- Abstract
Background: The degree of efficacy, safety, quality, and certainty of meta-analytic evidence of biological non-pharmacological treatments in mental disorders is unclear., Methods: We conducted an umbrella review (PubMed/Cochrane Library/PsycINFO-04-Jul-2021, PROSPERO/CRD42020158827) for meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) on deep brain stimulation (DBS), transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), electro-convulsive therapy (ECT), and others. Co-primary outcomes were standardized mean differences (SMD) of disease-specific symptoms, and acceptability (for all-cause discontinuation). Evidence was assessed with AMSTAR/AMSTAR-Content/GRADE., Results: We selected 102 meta-analyses. Effective interventions compared to sham were in depressive disorders: ECT (SMD=0.91/GRADE=moderate), TMS (SMD=0.51/GRADE=moderate), tDCS (SMD=0.46/GRADE=low), DBS (SMD=0.42/GRADE=very low), light therapy (SMD=0.41/GRADE=low); schizophrenia: ECT (SMD=0.88/GRADE=moderate), tDCS (SMD=0.45/GRADE=very low), TMS (prefrontal theta-burst, SMD=0.58/GRADE=low; left-temporoparietal, SMD=0.42/GRADE=low); substance use disorder: TMS (high frequency-dorsolateral-prefrontal-deep (SMD=1.16/GRADE=moderate), high frequency-left dorsolateral-prefrontal (SMD=0.77/GRADE=very low); OCD: DBS (SMD=0.89/GRADE=moderate), TMS (SMD=0.64/GRADE=very low); PTSD: TMS (SMD=0.46/GRADE=moderate); generalized anxiety disorder: TMS (SMD=0.68/GRADE=low); ADHD: tDCS (SMD=0.23/GRADE=moderate); autism: tDCS (SMD=0.97/GRADE=very low). No significant differences for acceptability emerged. Median AMSTAR/AMSTAR-Content was 8/2 (suggesting high-quality meta-analyses/low-quality RCTs), GRADE low., Discussion: Despite limited certainty, biological non-pharmacological interventions are effective and safe for numerous mental conditions. Results inform future research, and guidelines., Funding: None., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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42. What do Italian healthcare professionals think about orthorexia nervosa? Results from a multicenter survey.
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Gramaglia C, Gattoni E, Ferrante D, Abbate-Daga G, Baldissera E, Calugi S, Cascino G, Castellini G, Collantoni E, Favaro A, Marzola E, Monteleone AM, Monteleone P, Oriani MG, Renna C, Ricca V, Salvo P, Santonastaso P, Segura-Garcia C, Volpe U, and Zeppegno P
- Subjects
- Cohort Studies, Health Personnel, Humans, Italy, Obsessive Behavior diagnosis, Surveys and Questionnaires, Feeding and Eating Disorders diagnosis, Orthorexia Nervosa diagnosis
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Purpose: Orthorexia nervosa (ON) is an obsession for healthy and proper nutrition. Diagnostic criteria for ON are lacking and the psychopathology of ON is still a matter of debate in the clinical and scientific community. Our aim was to better understand the Italian clinical and scientific community's opinion about ON., Methods: Anonymous online survey for Italian healthcare professionals, implemented with the REDCap platform and spread through a multicenter collaboration. Information was gathered about socio-demographic, educational and occupational features, as well as about experience in the diagnosis and treatment of EDs. The main part of the survey focused on ON and its features, classification and sociocultural correlates., Results: The survey was completed by 343 participants. Most responders (68.2%) considered ON as a variant of Eating Disorders (EDs), and 58.6% a possible prodromal phase or evolution of Anorexia Nervosa (AN). Most participants (68.5%) thought the next DSM should include a specific diagnostic category for ON, preferably in the EDs macro-category (82.1%). Moreover, 77.3% of responders thought that ON deserves more attention on behalf of researchers and clinicians, and that its treatment should be similar to that for EDs (60.9%). Participants thinking that ON should have its own diagnostic category in the next DSM edition had greater odds of being younger (p = 0.004) and of considering ON a prodromic phase of another ED, such as AN (p = 0.039)., Discussion: Our survey suggests that the scientific community still seems split between those who consider ON as a separate disorder and those who do not. More research is still needed to better understand the construct of ON and its relationship with EDs; disadvantages and advantages of giving ON its own diagnosis should be balanced., Level of Evidence: V (descriptive cohort study)., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.)
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- 2022
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43. The Cyberball task in people after obesity surgery: preliminary evaluation of cognitive effects of social inclusion and exclusion with a laboratory task.
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Meneguzzo P, Tenconi E, Collantoni E, Longobardi G, Zappalà A, Vindigni V, Favaro A, and Pavan C
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- Cognition, Humans, Obesity surgery, Social Isolation psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Bariatric Surgery, Social Inclusion
- Abstract
Background: Social cognition and temperamental and interpretative styles could play a role in the outcome of bariatric surgery. This study aims to assess preliminary evidence about how obesity surgery patients evaluate social inclusion and exclusion through a ball-tossing game called Cyberball, looking at the influence of early maladaptive schemas., Methods: Thirty-four patients with a history of obesity surgery interventions and 44 controls were recruited for this study. A psychological evaluation was performed before and after the Cyberball task with self-report questionnaires., Results: In the ostracism condition, significant differences were seen across all the patients' fundamental psychological needs with less perceived ostracization (p = 0.001) even if they recognized less interaction via fewer ball tosses than controls. Moreover, the ostracism paradigm resulted in patients experiencing a higher urge to binge (p = 0.010) and a higher urge to restrain (p = 0.012) than controls. Looking at differences due to the Cyberball paradigm applied, clear differences emerged only between controls subgroups at the specific self-report scales applied, corroborating the reduced perception of the exclusion. As evidenced by the schema domains, the study found a connection between the impaired limits-schema domain and the drive to binge., Conclusion: The results show that obesity surgery patients reported different effects of the Cyberball task than controls. Different possible interpretations are discussed, and future directions for studies are exposed, both for the evaluation of social interactions effects and in the assessment of the role of specific cognitive schemas., Level of Evidence: Level III: evidence obtained from well-designed cohort or case-control analytic studies., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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44. Addressing Weight Bias in the Cisgender Population: Differences between Sexual Orientations.
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Meneguzzo P, Collantoni E, Meregalli V, Favaro A, and Tenconi E
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- Adolescent, Adult, Bisexuality psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Obesity, Sexual Behavior, Young Adult, Sexual and Gender Minorities, Weight Prejudice
- Abstract
(1) Background: Weight bias (WB) is an implicit psychological construct that can influence attitudes, beliefs, body experience, and evaluation of specific psychopathology relationships. Sexual orientation has played a crucial role in developing and maintaining psychiatric conditions linked to body evaluation, but few studies have evaluated possible connected biases. Thus, the paper aims to assess potential relationships between sexual orientation and WB, looking at potential roles in specific psychopathology; (2) Methods: A total of 836 cisgender subjects participated in an online survey, aged between 18 and 42 years old. Two specific aspects of WB were evaluated with validated scales about beliefs about obese people and fat phobia. Demographic variables, as well as depression and eating concerns were evaluated; (3) Results: Gay men and bisexual women showed higher levels of fat phobia, depression, and eating concerns. Regression analysis showed that sexual orientation significantly predicted fat phobia (p < 0.001) and beliefs about obese people (p = 0.014); (4) Conclusions: This study confirms the vulnerability of gay men and bisexual women to cognitive bias about their own bodies, showing a potential vulnerability about body and weight concerns.
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- 2022
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45. Cortical complexity estimation using fractal dimension: A systematic review of the literature on clinical and nonclinical samples.
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Meregalli V, Alberti F, Madan CR, Meneguzzo P, Miola A, Trevisan N, Sambataro F, Favaro A, and Collantoni E
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- Brain, Fractals, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
- Abstract
Fractal geometry has recently been proposed as a useful tool for characterizing the complexity of the brain cortex, which is likely to derive from the recurrence of sulci-gyri convolution patterns. The index used to describe the cortical complexity is called fractal dimensional (FD) and was employed by different research exploring the neurobiological correlates of distinct pathological and nonpathological conditions. This review aims to describe the literature on the application of this index, summarize the heterogeneities between studies and inform future research on this topic. Sixty-two studies were included in the systematic review. The main research lines concern neurodevelopment, aging and the neurobiology of specific psychiatric and neurological disorders. Overall, the included papers indicate that cortical complexity is likely to reduce during aging and in various pathological processes affecting the brain. Nevertheless, the high heterogeneity between studies strongly prevents the possibility of drawing conclusions. Further research considering this index besides other morphological values is needed to better clarify the role of FD in characterizing the cortical structure., (© 2022 The Authors. European Journal of Neuroscience published by Federation of European Neuroscience Societies and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2022
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46. Brain networks in eating disorders: a systematic review of graph theory studies.
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Collantoni E, Alberti F, Meregalli V, Meneguzzo P, Tenconi E, and Favaro A
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- Brain diagnostic imaging, Humans, Anorexia Nervosa, Bulimia Nervosa, Feeding and Eating Disorders
- Abstract
Purpose: Recent evidence from neuroimaging research has shown that eating disorders (EDs) are characterized by alterations in interconnected neural systems, whose characteristics can be usefully described by connectomics tools. The present paper aimed to review the neuroimaging literature in EDs employing connectomic tools, and, specifically, graph theory analysis., Methods: A systematic review of the literature was conducted to identify studies employing graph theory analysis on patients with eating disorders published before the 22nd of June 2020., Results: Twelve studies were included in the systematic review. Ten of them address anorexia nervosa (AN) (AN = 199; acute AN = 85, weight recovered AN with acute diagnosis = 24; fully recovered AN = 90). The remaining two articles address patients with bulimia nervosa (BN) (BN = 48). Global and regional unbalance in segregation and integration properties were described in both disorders., Discussion: The literature concerning the use of connectomics tools in EDs evidenced the presence of alterations in the topological characteristics of brain networks at a global and at a regional level. Changes in local characteristics involve areas that have been demonstrated to be crucial in the neurobiology and pathophysiology of EDs. Regional imbalances in network properties seem to reflect on global patterns., Level of Evidence: Level I, systematic review., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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47. A Multi-Faceted Evaluation of Impulsivity Traits and Early Maladaptive Schemas in Patients with Anorexia Nervosa.
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Meneguzzo P, Todisco P, Collantoni E, Meregalli V, Dal Brun D, Tenconi E, and Favaro A
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(1) Background: patients with Anorexia Nervosa (AN) are classified either as restrictive (ANr) or binge/purge (ANbp) according to the absence or presence of impulsive eating and compensatory behaviors. The aim of the present study was to assess the levels of impulsivity in both AN subtypes and to explore whether individual differences in impulsivity may be explained by differences in the presence of early maladaptive schemas. (2) Methods: the sample group included 122 patients with ANr, 112 patients with ANbp, and 131 healthy women (HW). All of these participants completed the UPPS-P scale for an assessment of impulsive behaviors and the Young Schema Questionnaire (YSQ-S3) for an assessment of early maladaptive schemas. (3) Results: the patients with ANbp displayed higher levels of impulsivity compared with the patients with ANr and HW. Patients with AN, especially the restrictive subtype, also reported higher levels of early maladaptive schemas than HW, and regression analyses revealed that specific maladaptive schemas partially explain the variability in impulsivity in both patients and HW. (4) Conclusions: it appears that maladaptive beliefs developed during childhood or adolescence may predict the development of impulsivity, a personality trait usually associated with maladaptive behaviors, and appears to be prevalent among ANbp patients. The clinical effects of this, as well as directions for future study, are also discussed in this paper.
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- 2021
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48. Sulcal characteristics patterns and gyrification gradient at different stages of Anorexia Nervosa: A structural MRI evaluation.
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Collantoni E, Madan CR, Meregalli V, Meneguzzo P, Marzola E, Panero M, D'Agata F, Abbate-Daga G, Tenconi E, Manara R, and Favaro A
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- Cerebral Cortex, Female, Frontal Lobe, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Anorexia Nervosa diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Previous research evidenced alterations of different cortical parameters in patients with acute Anorexia Nervosa (AN), but no study to date investigated the morphology of individual sulci and their relationship with other structural indices. Our study aims at exploring the depth and width of 16 major cortical sulci in AN at different stages of the disorder and their relationships with the gyrification gradient. Two samples were included in the study. The first involved 38 patients with acute AN, 20 who fully recovered from AN, and 38 healthy women (HW); the second included 16 patients with AN and 16 HW. Sulcal width and depth were estimated for 16 sulci and outlined with a factorial analysis. An anterior-posterior gradient of gyrification was also extracted. Compared to HW, patients with acute AN displayed higher width and depth values in specific cortical sulci, and an altered gyrification gradient in areas encompassing the Central Sulcus, and Parieto-Temporal and Frontal Lobe regions. Sulcal width negatively correlated with gyrification gradient in areas where these values are altered in AN patients. Our results suggest the presence of alterations in sulcal morphology with a pattern similar to the gyrification gradient one and which seems to be related with malnutrition., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Health-related quality of life assessment in eating disorders: adjustment and validation of a specific scale with the inclusion of an interpersonal domain.
- Author
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Meneguzzo P, Todisco P, Calonaci S, Mancini C, Dal Brun D, Collantoni E, Donini LM, Tenconi E, and Favaro A
- Subjects
- Humans, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, Feeding and Eating Disorders diagnosis, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Purpose: Quality of life is a fundamental aspect of both clinical practice and research on eating disorders (ED) due to the significant impacts these disorders have on everyday life. Disorder-specific scales can improve the quality of research and findings and offer greater sensitivity and responsiveness. However, no specific instrument is available in Italian for ED. The aim of this paper is to adjust and to validate a reliable scale with specific items regarding physical and interpersonal well-being., Methods: The Italian version of the Eating Disorder Quality of Life (IEDQOL) scale was developed, on the basis of the original English scale, with the addition of items pertaining to physical well-being and interpersonal interactions. In this study, 180 ED patients and 190 healthy controls from the community were enrolled both from inpatient units and outpatient services. A statistical analysis with an exploratory factorial approach was performed in order to validate the tool., Results: The results showed that the IEDQOL has very good psychometric properties with test-retest validity and sensitivity between patients and controls (d = 2.17 for total score). Moreover, the interpersonal domain showed excellent psychometric values (Cronbach's α > 0.70 in all the subgroups) and a robust correlation with other quality of life constructs., Conclusion: Future studies on the Italian population should use IEDQOL as outcome element that can be useful also with other disorder-specific psychopathological constructs and corroborate the reliability of the data. Future research in the ED field should only use this specific tool., Level of Evidence: Case-control analytic study, Level III., (© 2020. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The role of sexual orientation in the relationships between body perception, body weight dissatisfaction, physical comparison, and eating psychopathology in the cisgender population.
- Author
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Meneguzzo P, Collantoni E, Bonello E, Vergine M, Behrens SC, Tenconi E, and Favaro A
- Subjects
- Body Image, Body Weight, Female, Humans, Male, Sexual Behavior, Feeding and Eating Disorders, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
Purpose: Body weight dissatisfaction (BWD) and visual body perception are specific aspects that can influence the own body image, and that can concur with the development or the maintenance of specific psychopathological dimensions of different psychiatric disorders. The sexual orientation is a fundamental but understudied aspect in this field, and, for this reason, the purpose of this study is to improve knowledge about the relationships among BWD, visual body size-perception, and sexual orientation., Methods: A total of 1033 individuals participated in an online survey. Physical comparison, depression, and self-esteem was evaluated, as well as sexual orientation and the presence of an eating disorder. A Figure Rating Scale was used to assess different valences of body weight, and mediation analyses were performed to investigated specific relationships between psychological aspects., Results: Bisexual women and gay men reported significantly higher BWD than other groups (p < 0.001); instead, higher body misperception was present in gay men (p = 0.001). Physical appearance comparison mediated the effect of sexual orientation in both BWD and perceptual distortion. No difference emerged between women with a history of eating disorders and without, as regards the value of body weight attributed to attractiveness, health, and presence on social media., Conclusion: This study contributes to understanding the relationship between sexual orientations and body image representation and evaluation. Physical appearance comparisons should be considered as critical psychological factors that can improve and affect well-being. The impact on subjects with high levels of eating concerns is also discussed., Level of Evidence: Level III: case-control analytic study., (© 2020. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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