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Dive into the research topics where Arianna Goracci is active.

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Featured researches published by Arianna Goracci.


The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2009

The Effects of Undertreated Chronic Medical Illnesses in Patients With Severe Mental Disorders

Andrea Fagiolini; Arianna Goracci

Severe mental disorders such as bipolar disorder and schizophrenia often co-occur with chronic medical illnesses, especially cardiovascular disease and diabetes. These comorbidities are associated with a more severe course of mental illness, reduced quality of life, and premature mortality. Although the association between mental disorders and physical health complications has long been recognized, medical conditions remain undertreated in clinical psychiatric practice, and the life expectancy for individuals with serious psychiatric disorders is approximately 30% shorter than that of the general US population. Factors that are related to the mental illness (eg, cognitive impairment, reduced ability to function, and a lack of communication skills) as well as factors such as the high cost of medical care may make accessing general health care a difficult task for patients. Even when medical care is received by patients, the quality is often poor, and dangerous illnesses may be undiagnosed and untreated. In addition, harmful side effects of medications used to treat psychiatric disorders, unhealthy habits and lifestyles, and a possible genetic susceptibility to medical conditions increase the likelihood of comorbid physical conditions in patients with severe mental illness. Implementing behavioral interventions into clinical practice may help patients improve their overall health and prevent chronic medical conditions.


Fertility and Sterility | 2008

Infertility and psychiatric morbidity

Chiara Sbaragli; Giuseppe Morgante; Arianna Goracci; Tara Hofkens; Vincenzo De Leo; Paolo Castrogiovanni

OBJECTIVE To assess the relationship between psychiatric disorders and infertility. DESIGN Case-control study. SETTING Fertile and infertile volunteer couples in an academic research setting. PATIENT(S) Eighty-one infertile couples recruited from an infertility center before fertility treatment and 70 fertile controls recruited from an obstetrics and gynecology clinic. INTERVENTION(S) None. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) The presence of Axis 1 psychiatric disorders. RESULT(S) The occurrence of current psychiatric disorders was significantly higher among infertile subjects than among fertile controls, especially for adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood (16% vs. 2%) and for binge eating disorder (8% vs. 0). CONCLUSION(S) Our data highlight that a percentage of infertile patients have already developed a psychiatric disorder at the time of their first contact with a specialized fertility service. Possible applications are discussed, including the recommendation that gynecologists screen for clinical or subclinical psychiatric disorders in infertility patients and offer treatment accordingly.


European Neuropsychopharmacology | 2010

Antidepressants in healthy subjects: What are the psychotropic/psychological effects?

Alessandro Serretti; Raffaella Calati; Arianna Goracci; Martina Di Simplicio; Paolo Castrogiovanni; Diana De Ronchi

A wide debate is ongoing regarding whether antidepressant effects should be considered a general property of these agents or whether they exclusively belong to the context of target symptoms. The aim of the present review is to summarize findings on antidepressant influences on healthy volunteers, focusing on changes in psychological and cognitive functions. Differences have been detected between acute and chronic treatments. Acute treatment has been found to lead to positive bias in emotion processing and facilitation in negative emotion recognition. Chronic treatments have been found to stabilise some changes induced by acute treatment, such as increased social behaviours. Regarding antidepressant modulation of affective symptomatology contrasting results have been reported suggesting that the link between action on cognitive processes and mood may be not direct. In fact, meta-analyzing data on mood and anxiety symptoms no difference was detected between subjects receiving placebo and SSRIs. However, meta-analyzing data on negative affects, a significant decrease was detected in subjects receiving SSRIs in comparison with subjects receiving placebo. In summary, antidepressants seem to exert a detectable influence also in healthy subjects.


General Hospital Psychiatry | 2008

Quality of life, anxiety and depression in Sarcoidosis

Arianna Goracci; Andrea Fagiolini; Mirko Martinucci; Sara Calossi; Serena Rossi; Tonino Santomauro; Angela Mazzi; Francesco Penza; Antonella Fossi; Elena Bargagli; Maria Grazia Pieroni; Paola Rottoli; Paolo Castrogiovanni

OBJECTIVES This study sought to evaluate the quality of life and the presence of psychiatric disorders in patients with sarcoidosis. METHODS Data were collected from 80 consecutive outpatients with sarcoidosis presenting to the Sarcoidosis Center of the Respiratory Diseases Division at the University of Siena, Italy. RESULTS Forty-four percent of the subjects endorsed at least one psychiatric DSM-IV axis I diagnosis. Specifically, 25% of subjects met the criteria for Major Depressive Disorder, 6.3% for Panic Disorder, 6.3% for Bipolar Disorder, 5% for Generalized Anxiety Disorder and 1.3% for Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. Statistically significant correlations were found between Forced Expiratory Volume in the first second (FEV(1)), Forced Vital Capacity (FVC) and several domains of the Quality of Life Enjoyment and Satisfaction Questionnaire (Q-LES-Q) questionnaire. Subjects with multi-systemic involvement, with asthenia and with a more severe radiographic stage and subjects receiving steroids, reported a poorer quality of life. CONCLUSIONS Sarcoidosis is associated with a high rate of psychiatric comorbidity and may contribute to a poorer quality of life. A referral for a psychiatric or psychological evaluation and counseling should be considered for many of the sarcoidosis patients.


Psychological Medicine | 2016

Social cognition in people with schizophrenia: a cluster-analytic approach.

Paola Rocca; S. Galderisi; Alessandro Rossi; Alessandro Bertolino; Paola Rucci; Dino Gibertoni; Cristiana Montemagni; Monica Sigaudo; A. Mucci; Paola Bucci; T. Acciavatti; Eugenio Aguglia; Mario Amore; Antonello Bellomo; Diana De Ronchi; Liliana Dell'Osso; F. Di Fabio; Paolo Girardi; Arianna Goracci; Carlo Marchesi; Palmiero Monteleone; Cinzia Niolu; Federica Pinna; Rita Roncone; Emilio Sacchetti; Paolo Santonastaso; P. Zeppegno; Mario Maj

BACKGROUND The study aimed to subtype patients with schizophrenia on the basis of social cognition (SC), and to identify cut-offs that best discriminate among subtypes in 809 out-patients recruited in the context of the Italian Network for Research on Psychoses. METHOD A two-step cluster analysis of The Awareness of Social Inference Test (TASIT), the Facial Emotion Identification Test and Mayer-Salovey-Caruso Emotional Intelligence Test scores was performed. Classification and regression tree analysis was used to identify the cut-offs of variables that best discriminated among clusters. RESULTS We identified three clusters, characterized by unimpaired (42%), impaired (50.4%) and very impaired (7.5%) SC. Three theory-of-mind domains were more important for the cluster definition as compared with emotion perception and emotional intelligence. Patients more able to understand simple sarcasm (⩾14 for TASIT-SS) were very likely to belong to the unimpaired SC cluster. Compared with patients in the impaired SC cluster, those in the very impaired SC cluster performed significantly worse in lie scenes (TASIT-LI <10), but not in simple sarcasm. Moreover, functioning, neurocognition, disorganization and SC had a linear relationship across the three clusters, while positive symptoms were significantly lower in patients with unimpaired SC as compared with patients with impaired and very impaired SC. On the other hand, negative symptoms were highest in patients with impaired levels of SC. CONCLUSIONS If replicated, the identification of such subtypes in clinical practice may help in tailoring rehabilitation efforts to the persons strengths to gain more benefit to the person.


Schizophrenia Research | 2016

Pathways to functional outcome in subjects with schizophrenia living in the community and their unaffected first-degree relatives

Silvana Galderisi; Alessandro Rossi; Paola Rocca; Alessandro Bertolino; A. Mucci; Paola Bucci; Paola Rucci; Dino Gibertoni; Eugenio Aguglia; Mario Amore; Giuseppe Blasi; Anna Comparelli; Massimo Di Giannantonio; Arianna Goracci; Carlo Marchesi; Palmiero Monteleone; Cristiana Montemagni; Federica Pinna; Rita Roncone; Alberto Siracusano; Paolo Stratta; Maria Chiara Torti; Antonio Vita; P. Zeppegno; M. Chieffi; Mario Maj

RATIONALE Variables influencing real-life functioning have repeatedly been modeled in schizophrenia subjects but not systematically investigated in their unaffected first-degree relatives (SRs), in whom milder forms of deficits reported in schizophrenia have been observed, but confounders of clinical cohorts are not in play. Demonstrating that pathways to functional outcome are similar between patients and SRs would validate structural models developed in schizophrenia subjects. The present multicenter study aimed to explore whether variables associated with real-life functioning are similar in schizophrenia patients and their unaffected relatives. METHODS The study sample included 921 schizophrenia patients, 379 SRs and 780 healthy controls. Structural Equation Models (SEMs) were used in patients and SRs to test associations of psychopathological dimensions, neurocognition, social cognition, resilience, perceived stigma and functional capacity with real-life functioning domains, impaired in both patients and SRs. RESULTS Interpersonal Relationships and Work Skills were the only functional domains impaired in both patients and SRs. For both domains, functional impairment in patients was found to predict impairment in unaffected relatives, suggesting the involvement of similar illness-related vulnerability factors. In both groups variables significantly associated with Interpersonal Relationships included Social Cognition, Neurocognition, Avolition, Resilience, Disorganization, Perceived Stigma and Gender, and those significantly associated with Work Skills included Social Cognition, Neurocognition and Disorganization. CONCLUSIONS Pathways to functional outcome for Interpersonal relationships and Work skills are similar between schizophrenia patients and their unaffected first-degree relatives. These findings validate, in the absence of confounders of clinical cohorts, structural models of determinants of functional outcome in people with schizophrenia.


European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience | 2017

The relationships of personal resources with symptom severity and psychosocial functioning in persons with schizophrenia: results from the Italian Network for Research on Psychoses study

Alessandro Rossi; Silvana Galderisi; Paola Rocca; Alessandro Bertolino; A. Mucci; Paola Rucci; Dino Gibertoni; Eugenio Aguglia; Mario Amore; Ileana Andriola; Antonello Bellomo; Massimo Biondi; Gaetano Callista; Anna Comparelli; Liliana Dell’Osso; Massimo Di Giannantonio; Andrea Fagiolini; Carlo Marchesi; Palmiero Monteleone; Cristiana Montemagni; Cinzia Niolu; G. Piegari; Federica Pinna; Rita Roncone; Paolo Stratta; Elena Tenconi; Antonio Vita; P. Zeppegno; Mario Maj; Marina Mancini

The relationships of personal resources with symptom severity and psychosocial functioning have never been tested systematically in a large sample of people with schizophrenia. We applied structural equation models to a sample of 921 patients with schizophrenia collected in a nationwide Italian study, with the aim to identify, among a large set of personal resources, those that may have an association with symptom severity or psychosocial functioning. Several relevant demographic and clinical variables were considered concurrently. Poor service engagement and poor recovery style, as well as older age and younger age at onset, were related to greater symptom severity and poorer social functioning. Higher resilience and higher education were related to better social functioning only. Poor problem-focused coping and internalized stigma, as well as male gender and depression, were related to symptom severity only. The explored variables showed distinctive and partially independent associations with symptom severity and psychosocial functioning. A deeper understanding of these relationships may inform treatment decisions.


Journal of Addiction Medicine | 2015

Pharmacotherapy of binge-eating disorder: a review.

Arianna Goracci; Silvia di Volo; Francesco Casamassima; S. Bolognesi; Jim Benbow; Andrea Fagiolini

Objectives:The purpose of this article is to provide a comprehensive review of pharmacotherapy for binge eating disorder, including new therapeutic approaches such as centrally acting sympathomimetics, nootropics, lisdexamfetamine, and substance abuse treatment agents such as acamprosate, sodium oxybate, baclofen, and naltrexone. Methods:The study was conducted by searching the MEDLINE database using the keywords “binge eating disorder,” “obesity,” and “pharmacological therapy.”All available studies on each drug dating from 1988 to the present were considered, focusing mainly on randomized controlled trials (RCTs). Other types of studies were considered when no RCTs were found. We drafted separate tables for open-label studies (Table 1), RCT (Table 2), and retrospective studies (Table 3). Each study is detailed by the number of subjects, additional design considerations, doses, results, additional main comparators, and study limitations. Results:The data emerging from this study seem to show that, at least in the short term, some specific medications within the classes of antidepressants, anticonvulsants, and antiobesity agents may prove promising in achieving the main objectives in the treatment of binge eating disorder: reducing the frequency of binge eating, reducing weight, and improving the associated psychopathology. The major limitation in interpreting these results is the short duration of the studies and the lack of adequately sized trials, or trials including patients with medical comorbidities.Good results are being obtained with new combinations of drugs and with substance abuse treatment agents. Although the precise nature of the relationship between substance use disorders and binge eating disorder remains to be clarified, the evidence suggests that treatments recognized as effective for substance use disorders may be useful as novel treatments for binge eating disorder. This field of research remains open to future studies with more precise methodological approaches and more detailed parameter assessment; a multidisciplinary approach is also essential to better understand such a complex disease.


Asian Journal of Psychiatry | 2016

Adult obsessive–compulsive disorder and quality of life outcomes: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Anna Coluccia; Andrea Fagiolini; Fabio Ferretti; Andrea Pozza; G. Costoloni; S. Bolognesi; Arianna Goracci

In the current literature, there are no meta-analyses assessing quality of life (QOL) in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Knowledge of QOL domains mainly impaired in OCD could provide specific areas for intervention. The current meta-analysis assessed differences in global, work and social, family, and emotional QOL outcomes between patients with OCD and heathy controls. Age, gender and OCD severity were examined as moderators. Case-control studies were included if patients with primary OCD were compared with controls on QOL outcomes. Electronic databases (1966-October 2014) were searched. Thirteen case-control studies were included (n=26,015). Patients with OCD had significantly lower scores on QOL relative to controls, with moderate effect sizes on global QOL and large effect size on work and social, emotional and family QOL outcomes. Studies using higher percentages of female patients and patients with less severe OCD symptoms reported significantly lower QOL outcomes for patients with OCD than controls. Studies comparing patients with OCD and patients with other psychiatric disorders were not included. Treatments should address QOL in OCD, particularly emotional QOL. Additional strategies targeting QOL should be implemented for female patients with less severe OCD symptoms.


Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment | 2015

Bridging the gap between education and appropriate use of benzodiazepines in psychiatric clinical practice.

Bernardo Dell’Osso; Umberto Albert; Anna Rita Atti; Claudia Carmassi; Giuseppe Carrà; Fiammetta Cosci; Valeria Del Vecchio; Marco Di Nicola; S. Ferrari; Arianna Goracci; Felice Iasevoli; Mario Luciano; Giovanni Martinotti; Maria Giulia Nanni; A.M.A. Nivoli; Federica Pinna; Nicola Poloni; Maurizio Pompili; Gaia Sampogna; Ilaria Tarricone; Sarah Tosato; Umberto Volpe; Andrea Fiorillo

More than half a century after their discovery, benzodiazepines (BDZs) still represent one of the largest and most widely prescribed groups of psychotropic compounds, not only in clinical psychiatry but also in the entire medical field. Over the last two decades, however, there has been an increased focus on the development of antidepressants and antipsychotics on the part of the pharmaceutical industry, clinicians, and researchers, with a reduced interest in BDZs, in spite of their widespread clinical use. As a consequence, many psychiatric residents, medical students, nurses, and other mental health professionals might receive poor academic teaching and training regarding these agents, and have the false impression that BDZs represent an outdated chapter in clinical psychopharmacology. However, recent advances in the field, including findings concerning epidemiology, addiction risk, and drug interactions, as well as the introduction of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition with related diagnostic changes, strongly encourage an updated appraisal of the use of BDZs in clinical practice. During a recent thematic event convened with the aim of approaching this topic in a critical manner, a group of young Italian psychiatrists attempted to highlight possible flaws in current teaching pathways, identify the main clinical pros and cons regarding current use of BDZs in clinical practice, and provide an updated overview of their use across specific clinical areas and patient populations. The main results are presented and discussed in this review.

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A. Mucci

University of Naples Federico II

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