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Dive into the research topics where Antonio Prunas is active.

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Featured researches published by Antonio Prunas.


European Psychiatry | 2012

Psychometric properties of the Italian version of the SCL-90-R: A study on a large community sample ☆

Antonio Prunas; I Sarno; Emanuele Preti; F Madeddu; Marco Perugini

We present the factor structure and psychometric properties of the Italian version of the SCL-90-R based on a large sample of the Italian population. The sample (N=3631) included high-school and university students and adults from the community (age range=13-70 yrs; 39.2% males). Principal component analysis (PCA) supported by parallel analysis, yielded eight components, partially overlapping those in the original version; no evidence of Psychoticism and Paranoid Ideation as separate subscales emerged. Twenty-one items were consecutively deleted, leading to a 69-item version of the scale. Internal coherence was good for all subscales (α values between 0.70 and 0.96). However, the eight-factor solution did not prove consistent when analyses were replicated after dividing the sample in subgroups according to gender and age. A second-order PCA yielded a single factor, supporting the adoption of the GSI as an index of general distress. A 69-item brief version of the scale has been empirically derived in this study, and can possibly be adopted as a screening measure for general distress in Italian adults and adolescents; however, caution should be exercised when interpreting the clinical profile due to the instability of factor structure.


Neurological Sciences | 2008

The burden of distress in caregivers of elderly demented patients and its relationship with coping strategies

Valentina Elisabetta Di Mattei; Antonio Prunas; Liliana Novella; Alessandra Marcone; Stefano F. Cappa; Lucio Sarno

ObjectivePrevious studies have shown that taking care of elderly, demented patients carries a high cost to caregivers’ health, and is associated with negative consequences for physical and mental health. The aim of this study is to investigate which socio-demographic and clinical variables are significantly associated with higher levels of distress in caregivers, and the relationship between caregivers’ levels of distress and the coping strategies they adopt.Patients and participantsThe study samples 112 caregivers of demented patients, consecutively admitted to the Department of Neurology of San Raffaele-Turro Hospital (Milan, Italy).Measurements and resultsCaregivers were asked to complete the CBI and the COPE. Caregivers with the highest levels of distress are characterised by an impaired physical health status. Avoidance coping may represent a risk factor associated with higher levels of distress; conversely, an active and problem-focused approach to stressful situations may act as a protective factor.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2014

Attachment insecurities, maladaptive perfectionism, and eating disorder symptoms: A latent mediated and moderated structural equation modeling analysis across diagnostic groups

Antonios Dakanalis; C. Alix Timko; M. Assunta Zanetti; Lucio Rinaldi; Antonio Prunas; Giuseppe Carrà; Giuseppe Riva; Massimo Clerici

Although 96-100% of individuals with eating disorders (EDs) report insecure attachment, the specific mechanisms by which adult insecure attachment dimensions affect ED symptomatology remain to date largely unknown. This study examined maladaptive perfectionism as both a mediator and a moderator of the relationship between insecure attachment (anxiety and avoidance) and ED symptomatology in a clinical, treatment seeking, sample. Insecure anxious and avoidant attachment, maladaptive perfectionism, and ED symptomatology were assessed in 403 participants from three medium size specialized care centres for EDs in Italy. Structural equation modeling indicated that maladaptive perfectionism served as mediator between both insecure attachment patterns and ED symptomatology. It also interacted with insecure attachment to predict higher levels of ED symptoms - highlighting the importance of both insecure attachment patterns and maladaptive aspects of perfectionism as treatment targets. Multiple-group comparison analysis did not reveal differences across diagnostic groups (AN, BN, EDNOS) in mediating, main and interaction effects of perfectionism. These findings are consistent with recent discussions on the classification and treatment of EDs that have highlighted similarities between ED diagnostic groups and could be viewed through the lens of the Trans-theoretical Model of EDs. Implications for future research and intervention are discussed.


Eating Disorders | 2012

Disordered eating behaviors among Italian men: Objectifying media and sexual orientation differences

Antonios Dakanalis; Valentina Elisabetta Di Mattei; Elena Pagani Bagliacca; Antonio Prunas; Lucio Sarno; Giuseppe Riva; M. Assunta Zanetti

Objectification theory was tested as a suitable framework for explaining sexual orientation differences in disordered eating behaviors in college-aged Italian men. The theorys applicability to 125 homosexual and 130 heterosexual men was investigated using self-report questionnaires. Gay men scored significantly higher on exposure to sexually objectifying media, body surveillance, body shame, disordered eating behaviors, and depression than heterosexual men. Although path analyses support the theorys applicability to both groups, for gay men the path model demonstrated a better fit to the objectification theory for disordered eating and depression. Practical implications are discussed.


The Journal of Psychology | 2015

Body Dissatisfaction and Eating Disorder Symptomatology: A Latent Structural Equation Modeling Analysis of Moderating Variables in 18-to-28-Year-Old Males

Antonios Dakanalis; Laura Favagrossa; Massimo Clerici; Antonio Prunas; Fabrizia Colmegna; M. Assunta Zanetti; Giuseppe Riva

ABSTRACT. Although body dissatisfaction is recognized as the strongest risk factor for eating disturbances, a majority of young males are body dissatisfied, but do not concomitantly report severe levels of eating disorder symptomatology. The present investigation was designed to examine five theoretically relevant variables (i.e., body checking, emotional dysregulation, perfectionism, insecure-anxious attachment, and self-esteem) as potential moderators of the relationship between body dissatisfaction and two critical components of male eating disorder symptomatology: drive for muscularity and bulimic behaviors. Data collected from 551 Italian males between 18 and 28 years old were analyzed using latent structural equation modeling. The authors found that emotional dysregulation, body checking, insecure-anxious attachment and perfectionism intensified the relationship between body dissatisfaction and each criterion variable representing male eating disorder symptomatology; the interactions accounted respectively for an additional 2%, 7%, 4% and 5% of variance in drive for muscularity and for an additional 6%, 4%, 5%, and 2% of the variance in bulimic behaviors. By contrast self-esteem weakened this relationship and the interactions accounted for an additional 3% of the variance in both drive for muscularity and bulimic behaviors. Implications of these findings for prevention and treatment of male eating disturbances are discussed.


Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2009

The Italian version of the Response Evaluation Measure–71

Antonio Prunas; Fabio Madeddu; Stefano Pozzoli; Cristina Gatti; Richard J. Shaw; Hans Steiner

OBJECTIVE The aim of the present study was to analyze the psychometric properties of the Italian version of the Response Evaluation Measure (REM-71), a 71-item self-report measure previously developed for the assessment of defenses in adults and adolescents. The authors also examined the differences in the use of defenses based on sex and age (early adolescence, late adolescence, and early adulthood), and the association between defenses, psychosocial health, and psychologic distress in a large community sample. METHOD The Italian version of REM-71 was obtained through back-translation and administered to 1648 (1020 female subjects, mean age = 19.5 years, SD = +/-5.77) community subjects, aged between 13 and 68 years, voluntarily recruited among high school and university students in Milan, Italy, and the surrounding area. All subjects completed a self-report measure to assess demographic variables and satisfaction with life. A subsample (n = 1197) completed the Italian version of the Symptom Checklist-90-Revised to assess symptoms of psychologic distress. RESULTS Results were highly consistent with those obtained in the original English version of the REM-71 and included satisfactory internal consistency of the measure. Factor analyses yielded 2 principal factors that showed overall stability across age and sex subgroups. Factor 1 and factor 2 defenses were significantly correlated, in line with theoretical expectations, with positive and negative aspects of various domains of life. CONCLUSIONS Results provide further support for the structure and validity of the REM-71 as a useful instrument for the assessment of defenses in adolescents and adults and suggest no major cross-cultural differences in the organization of these defenses.


Journal of Interpersonal Violence | 2015

Transphobic Murders in Italy: An Overview of Homicides in Milan (Italy) in the Past Two Decades (1993-2012)

Antonio Prunas; Carlo Alfredo Clerici; Guendalina Gentile; Enrico Muccino; Laura Veneroni; Riccardo Zoja

In Europe, 71 murders resulting in the death of transgendered persons were reported between 2008 and 2013, 20 of which perpetrated in Italy, the second highest rate in Europe after Turkey. We retrospectively analyzed the homicides of transgender people recorded at the Medicolegal Bureau in Milan from January 1993 to December 2012. First we considered the sociodemographic data of 20 victims and the circumstantial details of their deaths, then we examined the data related to the cause of death from the autopsy reports. Our data show that victims are mostly immigrants, biological males presenting with a feminine attire and with varying degrees of feminization. The large majority of the victims were sex workers from South America. As for murderers, they were unknown in 7 cases (35%); all the 13 murderers identified were males, aged between 17 and 63 (M age = 31 years). In 38% of the cases, the murderer was the victim’s current or former partner. For half of the homicides, it was possible to identify at least one primary indicator of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) hate crime. Our findings call for the need to make explicit in Italian legislation that a crime perpetrated on the ground of sexual orientation and gender identity constitutes a hate crime.


Personality Disorders: Theory, Research, and Treatment | 2015

The facets of identity: personality pathology assessment through the Inventory of Personality Organization.

Emanuele Preti; Antonio Prunas; Chiara De Panfilis; Carlo Marchesi; F Madeddu; John F. Clarkin

This work aims to further validate the object-relations-based model of personality pathology assessment, evaluating the psychometric properties of the Italian version of the Inventory of Personality Organization (IPO), a self-report instrument for the assessment of personality organization according to O. Kernbergs model of personality pathology. Six hundred ninety-six nonclinical volunteers and 121 psychiatric patients completed a set of questionnaires including the IPO, the Severity Indices of Personality Problems, the Borderline Personality Disorder Checklist, the Response Evaluation Measure 71, and the Symptom Checklist 90-Revised. Confirmatory factor-analyses on the IPO items supported the 1-, 2-, 3-, and 4-factor solutions. The last (Instability of sense of self/others, Instability of goals, Instability of behaviors, Psychosis) resulted in relatively better fit indexes. Invariance across samples (nonclinical, clinical) and gender was confirmed. The 4 IPO subscales showed good levels of internal coherence and, in the nonclinical sample, good test-retest reliability. Associations with the convergent measures were in line with theoretical expectations and supported the benefit of adopting a 4-factor solution. The 4 factors showed the expected criterion relations: All the dimensions discriminated between clinical and nonclinical subjects, whereas only Instability of self/others and Instability of goals discriminated patients with borderline personality disorder from patients with other diagnoses. Our results suggest that the Italian version of the IPO is a reliable and valid tool for the assessment of personality organization according to Kernbergs model. Results are discussed in the context of the current directions in the evaluation of personality disorders proposed by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th edition.


Psicologia sociale | 2012

The objectified body: media, psychophysical well-being and gender differences

Antonios Dakanalis; Valentina Elisabetta Di Mattei; Antonio Prunas; Giuseppe Riva; Lucio Sarno; Chiara Volpato; Maria Assunta Zanetti

PSICOLOGIA SOCIALE n. 2, maggio-agosto 2012 In accordo con la teoria dell’oggettivazione (Fredrickson e Roberts, 1997) sono stati esaminati gli effetti dell’esposizione a immagini mediatiche sessualmente oggettivanti sul processo dell’autooggettivazione e sul benessere psicofisico di giovani adulti. Per le donne l’esposizione a immagini oggettivanti conduce all’auto-oggettivazione/sorveglianza del corpo, aumentando così la vergogna per l’aspetto, che a sua volta è collegata all’insorgenza di disordini alimentari. Gli stessi risultati (seppur più deboli) sono emersi tra gli uomini. Le donne hanno ottenuto punteggi medi significativamente superiori in tutte le variabili precedentemente denominate. Differenze di genere sono emerse anche nel ruolo della sorveglianza e della vergogna come variabili mediatrici. Le implicazioni pratiche vengono discusse. Il corpo oggettivato: media, benessere psicofisico e differenze di genere


Mental Health and Substance Use: Dual Diagnosis | 2011

Polydrug abuse and personality disorders in a sample of substance-abusing inpatients

Emanuele Preti; Antonio Prunas; Furio Ravera; Fabio Madeddu

In the last two decades, polydrug abuse has gained increasing attention and many studies have reported high prevalence rates of this phenomenon. The psychological and demographic correlates and negative associated outcomes of polydrug abuse have also been investigated. These findings support the need of an exploration of the relationship between polydrug abuse and comorbid personality pathology. In fact, although the issue of comorbidity between personality disorders (PDs) and substance use has become an established field of study, the association between dual diagnosis and polydrug abuse has received little attention in the literature. The present study aims to investigate the prevalence of polydrug abuse and personality pathology in a sample of substance-abusing inpatients and to compare polydrug abusers and monodrug abusers in terms of sociodemographic characteristics, medical and case history data, outcome variables, and PDs. The files of 117 consecutively admitted inpatients were reviewed, and inform...

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Emanuele Preti

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Antonios Dakanalis

University of Milano-Bicocca

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F Madeddu

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Lucio Sarno

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Chiara Volpato

University of Milano-Bicocca

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