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Featured researches published by Elisa Simonini.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 1997

Prevalence of anxiety disorders comorbidity in bipolar depression, unipolar depression and dysthymia

Stefano Pini; Giovanni B. Cassano; Elisa Simonini; Mario Savino; Antonio Russo; Stuart A. Montgomery

Eighty-seven patients with current episode of depression were assessed by the SCID-P and subdivided in bipolar depressives (N = 24), unipolar depressives (n = 38) and dysthymics (n = 25). Anxiety disorders comorbidity in these three groups was investigated by means of the SCID-P. Panic disorder comorbidity was found in 36.8% of bipolar depressives, 31.4% of unipolar depressives and 13% of dysthymics. Prevalence of obsessive-compulsive disorder was 21.1% in bipolars, 14.3% in unipolars and 8.7% in dysthymics. Generalized anxiety disorder resulted in being much more associated with dysthymia (65.2%) than with bipolar (31.6%) or unipolar depression (37.1%). Social phobia comorbidity was exhibited mainly by unipolars (11.4%), while no cases were detected in the bipolar group. Odds ratios revealed that generalized anxiety disorder is significantly more likely to co-occur with dysthymia. Panic disorder showed a higher trend to be associated with bipolar and unipolar depression. Social phobia was more frequent among unipolar depression.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2001

The temporal relationship between anxiety disorders and (hypo)mania: a retrospective examination of 63 panic, social phobic and obsessive-compulsive patients with comorbid bipolar disorder.

Giulio Perugi; Hagop S. Akiskal; Cristina Toni; Elisa Simonini; Alfredo Gemignani

BACKGROUND The relationship between anxiety and depressive disorders has been conventionally limited to unipolar depression. Recent studies from both clinical and epidemiologic samples have revealed intriguing associations between anxiety and bipolar (mainly bipolar II) disorders. The present report examines the temporal sequence of hypomania to panic (PD), obsessive-compulsive (OCD) and social phobic (SP) disorders. METHODS Specialty-trained clinicians retrospectively evaluated the foregoing relationships in 63 patients meeting the DSM-III-R diagnosis for PD, OCD and SP with lifetime comorbidity with bipolar disorders (87% bipolar II). Structured interviews were used. RESULTS In nearly all cases, SP chronologically preceded hypomanic episodes and disappeared when the latter episodes supervened. By contrast, PD and OCD symptomatology, even when preceding hypomanic episodes, often persisted during such episodes; more provocatively, nearly a third of all onsets of panic attacks were during hypomania. LIMITATIONS Assessing temporal relationships between hypomania and specific anxiety disorders on a retrospective basis is, at best, of unknown reliability. The related difficulty of ascertaining the extent to which past antidepressant treatment of anxiety disorders could explain the anxiety-bipolar II comorbidity represents another major limitation. CONCLUSIONS Different temporal relationships characterized the occurrence of hypomania in individual anxiety disorder subtypes. Some anxiety disorders (notably SP, and to some extent OCD) seem to lie on a broad affective continuum of inhibitory restraint vs. disinhibited hypomania. By contrast, and more tentatively, PD in the context of bipolar disorder, might be a reflection of a dysphoric manic or mixed hypomanic symptomatology. The foregoing suggestions do not even begin to exhaust the realm of possibilities. The pattern of complex relationships among these disorders would certainly require better designed prospective observations.


British Journal of Psychiatry | 1990

Gender-mediated clinical features of depressive illness. The importance of temperamental differences.

Giulio Perugi; Laura Musetti; Elisa Simonini; F. Piagentini; G.B. Cassano; H.S. Akiskal


Journal of Affective Disorders | 1993

Affective comorbidity in panic disorder : is there a bipolar connection ?

Mario Savino; Giulio Perugi; Elisa Simonini; A Soriani; Giovanni B. Cassano; H.S. Akiskal


Pharmacopsychiatry | 1999

Clinical experience using adjunctive gabapentin in treatment-resistant bipolar mixed states.

Giulio Perugi; Cristina Toni; Giuseppe Ruffolo; S. Sartini; Elisa Simonini; H.S. Akiskal


Comprehensive Psychiatry | 1990

Primary and secondary social phobia: Psychopathologic and familial differentiations.

Giulio Perugi; Elisa Simonini; Mario Savino; F. Mengali; G.B. Cassano; Hagop S. Akiskal


Journal of Affective Disorders | 1999

Avoidant personality in social phobia and panic–agoraphobic disorder: a comparison

Giulio Perugi; Stefano Nassini; Cristina Socci; Michele Lenzi; Cristina Toni; Elisa Simonini; Hagop S. Akiskal


Anxiety | 1994

Treatment of social phobia with fluoxetine.

Giulio Perugi; Stefano Nassini; Michele Lenzi; Elisa Simonini; Giovanni B. Cassano; Douglas M. McNair


British Journal of Psychiatry | 1994

Social adjustment in panic-agoraphobic patients reconsidered.

Giulio Perugi; H.S. Akiskal; Laura Musetti; Elisa Simonini; G.B. Cassano


British Journal of Psychiatry | 1990

Gender-mediated clinical features of depressive illness. The importance of temperamental differences [published erratum appears in Br J Psychiatry 1991 Mar;158:438]

Giulio Perugi; Laura Musetti; Elisa Simonini; F. Piagentini; Giovanni B. Cassano; Hagop S. Akiskal

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H.S. Akiskal

University of California

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