Annunziata Romeo
University of Turin
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Featured researches published by Annunziata Romeo.
Journal of Affective Disorders | 2017
Marialaura Di Tella; Valentina Tesio; Annunziata Romeo; Fabrizio Colonna; Enrico Fusaro; Riccardo Torta; Lorys Castelli
BACKGROUND Fibromyalgia (FM) is a chronic pain syndrome with a high prevalence of alexithymia, a personality disposition that affects emotional self-awareness. The present study aimed to investigate the relationship between alexithymia and pain, differentiating between the sensory and affective components of pain experience, in a sample of FM patients. METHODS One hundred and fifty-nine FM patients completed a battery of tests assessing pain experience, pain intensity, alexithymia and psychological distress. In order to characterize the clinical profile of alexithymic FM patients, alexithymic and non-alexithymic groups were compared on the different measures. Two regression analyses were performed on the total sample, in order to investigate the relationship between alexithymia and pain, controlling for psychological distress. RESULTS Alexithymic FM patients presented higher scores on all the clinical measures compared to non-alexithymic ones. Positive correlations were found between alexithymia and the affective, but not the sensory, dimension of pain experience variables. Regression analyses showed that alexithymia (difficulty identifying feelings factor) ceased to uniquely predict affective pain, after controlling for psychological distress, particularly anxiety. In addition, none of the alexithymia variables significantly explained pain intensity variance. Finally, a significant effect of anxiety in mediating the relationship between alexithymia and affective pain was found. LIMITATIONS No longitudinal data were included. CONCLUSIONS These findings show the presence of higher levels of pain and psychological distress in alexithymic vs. non-alexithymic FM patients, and a relevant association between alexithymia and the affective dimension of pain experience. Specifically, this relationship appears to be significantly mediated by anxiety.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2017
Annunziata Romeo; Valentina Tesio; Marialaura Di Tella; Fabrizio Colonna; Giuliano Geminiani; Enrico Fusaro; Lorys Castelli
This study investigated the link between alexithymia and depressive symptoms in Fibromyalgia (FM). 181 FM women and 181 healthy controls (HC) were compared using the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and the Toronto Alexithymia Scale. A moderation analysis was performed to examine the moderation effect of the group (FM vs. HC) on the relationship between alexithymia and depression. Group was a significant moderator, highlighting a stronger relationship between alexithymia and depressive symptoms in the FM compared to HC. The study highlighted that the association between alexithymia and depression is different when we consider FM patients rather than the healthy population.
Scandinavian Journal of Psychology | 2018
Marialaura Di Tella; Valentina Tesio; Annunziata Romeo; Fabrizio Colonna; Enrico Fusaro; Giuliano Geminiani; Maria Grazia Bruzzone; Riccardo Torta; Lorys Castelli
Fibromyalgia (FM) is a chronic pain syndrome characterized by high levels of psychological distress and alexithymia, a personality disposition affecting emotional self-awareness. The main aim of the present study was to investigate for the first time the relationship between alexithymia and coping strategies on the one hand, and alexithymia and perceived social support on the other, in a sample of FM patients. To reach this aim, 153 FM patients completed a battery of tests assessing coping strategies, perceived social support, alexithymia, psychological distress and pain intensity. Four regression analyses were performed to assess whether alexithymia was still a significant predictor of coping strategies and perceived social support, after controlling for psychological distress. High levels of both psychological distress and alexithymia were found in our sample of FM patients. Regarding coping strategies, FM patients reported higher scores on problem-focused coping, with respect to the other two coping strategies. The regression analyses showed that the externally-oriented thinking factor of alexithymia significantly explained both problem- and emotion-focused coping, while the difficulty-describing feelings factor of alexithymia proved to be a significant predictor of perceived social support. Only the variance of dysfunctional coping ceased to be uniquely explained by alexithymia (difficulty identifying feelings factor), after controlling for psychological distress, particularly anxiety. These results highlight a negative relationship between alexithymia and both the use of effective coping strategies and the levels of perceived social support in FM patients. An adequate assessment of both alexithymia and psychological distress should therefore be included in clinical practice with these patients.
Journal of Psychosocial Oncology | 2017
Annunziata Romeo; Valentina Tesio; Marialaura Di Tella; Riccardo Torta; Lorys Castelli
ABSTRACT Identifying factors fostering post-traumatic growth (PTG) is very important to promote PTG itself through specific psychological interventions. To this end, we investigated PTG and its relationship with clinical and psychological variables in a sample of 108 female breast cancer survivors. Results showed that women with higher depressive symptoms presented lower levels of PTG than women without. Moreover, women who had undergone combined treatment presented higher levels of PTG than women who had not. The results highlighted the resulting importance of psychological intervention focusing on depressive symptoms, which negatively interfere with the patients’ psychological growth.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2017
Annunziata Romeo; Valentina Tesio; Gianluca Castelnuovo; Lorys Castelli
Chronic pain (CP) is a burdensome symptom. Different psychological models have been proposed to explain the role of psychological and social factors in developing and maintaining CP. Attachment, for example, is a psychological construct of possible relevance in CP. The first studies on the role of attachment in CP did not investigate the partner’s psychological factors, thus neglecting the influence of the latter. The main aim of this mini-review was to examine the more recent literature investigating the relationship between CP and attachment style. In particular, whether or not more recent studies assessed the psychological variables of a patient’s partner. The articles were selected from the Medline/PubMed database using the search terms “attachment” AND “pain”; “CP” AND “attachment style,” which led to nine papers being identified. The results showed that, even though the key point was still the hypothesis that an insecure attachment style is associated with CP, in recent years researchers have focused on the possible psychological aspects mediating between attachment style and CP. In particular, worrying, coping strategies, catastrophizing and perceived spouse responses to pain behavior were taken into account. Only one study considered the role of the reciprocal influence of attachment style of both patient and partner, underlining the role of real significant others’ responses to pain behaviors. In conclusion, the results of the present mini-review highlight how in recent years researchers have moved toward investigating those psychological aspects that could mediate the relationship between attachment and CP, while only partially evaluating the interpersonal perspective.
Journal of Affective Disorders | 2018
Marialaura Di Tella; Ivan Enrici; Lorys Castelli; Fabrizio Colonna; Enrico Fusaro; Annunziata Romeo; Valentina Tesio; Mauro Adenzato
BACKGROUND Fibromyalgia (FM) is a syndrome characterized by chronic, widespread musculoskeletal pain, occurring predominantly in women. Previous studies have shown that patients with FM display a pattern of selective processing or cognitive bias which fosters the encoding of pain-related information. The present study tested the hypothesis of an increased attribution of pain to facial expressions of emotions (FEE), in patients with FM. As previous studies have shown that alexithymia influences the processing of facial expressions, independent of specific clinical conditions, we also investigated whether alexithymia, rather than FM per se, influenced attribution of pain to FEE. METHODS One hundred and twenty-three women (41 with FM, 82 healthy controls, HC) were enrolled in this cross-sectional case-control study. We adopted two pain-attribution tasks, the Emotional Pain Estimation and the Emotional Pain Ascription, both using a modified version of the Ekman 60 Faces Test. Psychological distress was assessed using the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, and alexithymia was assessed using the Toronto Alexithymia Scale. RESULTS Patients with FM did not report increased attribution of pain to FEE. Alexithymic individuals demonstrated no specific problem in the recognition of basic emotions, but attributed significantly more pain to angry facial expression. LIMITATIONS Our study involved a relatively small sample size. The use of self-reported instruments might have led to underestimation of the presence of frank alexithymia in individuals having borderline cut-off scores. CONCLUSIONS Alexithymia, rather than FM per se, plays a key role in explaining the observed differences in pain attribution to anger-related facial expressions.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2018
Valentina Tesio; Marialaura Di Tella; Annunziata Romeo; Fabrizio Colonna; Enrico Fusaro; Giuliano Geminiani; Lorys Castelli
Pain in fibromyalgia (FM) is accompanied by a heterogeneous series of other symptoms, which strongly affect patients’ quality of life and interfere with social and work performance. The present study aimed to evaluate the effects of alexithymia on both the physical and the psychosocial components of the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of FM patients, controlling for the concomitant effects of depression, anxiety, and pain. In particular, given the strong interconnection between depression and alexithymia, the relationship between alexithymia and HRQoL as mediated by depressive symptoms was further investigated. Data were collected on a consecutive sample of 205 female patients with a main diagnosis of FM. The results showed that about 26% of the patients showed the presence of alexithymia, as assessed by the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20). Clinically relevant levels of depressive and anxiety symptoms were present in 61 and 60% of the patients, respectively. The results of the hierarchical multiple regression analyses showed that pain intensity (PI) and depressive symptoms explained the 45% of the variance of the physical component of HRQoL (p < 0.001). Regarding the mental component of HRQoL, depressive and anxiety symptoms, alexithymia, and PI significantly explained 61% of the variance (p < 0.001). The mediation analyses confirmed that alexithymia had a direct effect on the mental component of HRQoL and showed a statistically significant indirect effect on both the physical and the mental components, through the mediation of depressive symptoms. In conclusion, the results of the present study suggested the presence of both a direct and an indirect effect of alexithymia, in particular of the difficulty identifying feeling, on the HRQoL of patients with FM. Indeed, even though the concomitant presence of depressive symptoms is responsible of an indirect effect, alexithymia per se seems to directly contribute to worsen the impact that this chronic pain pathology has on the patients’ quality of life, especially regarding the psychosocial functioning.
QUADERNI DI PSICOTERAPIA COGNITIVA | 2016
Benedetta Vicino; Rita B. Ardito; Annunziata Romeo; Riccardo Torta; Lorys Castelli
La fibromialgia e una sindrome somatica funzionale caratterizzata da dolore muscoloscheletrico diffuso, rigidita muscolare, disturbi del sonno, affaticabilita; non e rara la comorbilita con disturbi d’ansia e dell’umore; il suo decorso tende a essere cronico. Benche l’eziologia sia ancora poco chiara, si ipotizza che possano essere implicati diversi fattori di origine biologica, psicologica e ambientale. Un intervento psicoterapeutico breve puo permettere di individuare e intervenire su alcuni dei fattori psicologici che risultano essere rilevanti per lo specifico paziente, con l’obiettivo di migliorare il funzionamento globale e la qualita della vita della persona. L’obiettivo del nostro lavoro e presentare alcune indicazioni operative che possono essere usate dal terapeuta cognitivo per orientarsi rispetto alla presa in carico di questi pazienti. L’intervento psicoterapeutico che verra descritto si snoda in tre fasi: la prima e dedicata alla costruzione dell’alleanza terapeutica, la seconda all’avvicinamento al mondo emotivo (autosservazione e regolazione emotiva), la terza permette di favorire l’assunzione di un ruolo attivo che sia orientato alla mobilitazione delle proprie risorse da parte del paziente. Infine verra presentato il caso di Anna, una paziente di 70 anni che soffre di fibromialgia da quando aveva 13 anni.
Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology | 2017
Riccardo Torta; Valentina Tesio; Marialaura Di Tella; Annunziata Romeo; Fabrizio Colonna; Giuliano Geminiani; Enrico Fusaro; Alberto Batticciotto; Lorys Castelli
Mediterranean Journal of Clinical Psychology | 2017
Annunziata Romeo; Marialaura Di Tella