Gianni Savron
University of Bologna
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Featured researches published by Gianni Savron.
Journal of Affective Disorders | 1991
Francesco M. Saviotti; Silvana Grandi; Gianni Savron; Roberta Ermentini; Giovanna Bartolucci; S. Conti; Giovanni A. Fava
Three self-rating personality inventories were administered to 33 patients who had recovered from panic disorder associated with agoraphobia and to 33 healthy subjects matched for sociodemographic variables. The personality inventories comprised the Tridimensional Personality Questionnaire (TPQ), which provides three major dimensions (novelty seeking, harm avoidance and reward dependence), the Anxiety Sensitivity Index (ASI) and the Emotional Inhibition Scale (EIS). Agoraphobic patients reported significantly more TPQ harm avoidance and anxiety sensitivity than controls. Although these findings might have been influenced by residual anxiety symptoms in panic-free patients and could also apply to patients with other anxiety disorders, they suggest that harm avoidance and anxiety sensitivity may be risk factors for developing agoraphobia and panic disorder. There may be overlap between this characterologic cluster and prodromal symptoms of panic disorder with agoraphobia, such as anxiety, phobias and hypochondriasis.
Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 1997
Giovanni A. Fava; Gianni Savron; Maria Zielezny; Silvana Grandi; Chiara Rafanelli; S. Conti
The issue of panic disorder resistant to treatment (whether pharmacological or psychological) has attracted little research attention, despite its clinical frequency and importance. The aim of this study was to compare three treatment modalities, namely exposure alone (E), exposure associated with imipramine (EI) and cognitive therapy supplementing exposure (EC), in a sample of 21 patients with DSM‐IV panic disorder and agoraphobia, who failed to respond to a first standard course of individual behavioural treatment based on exposure in vivo. Treatments were administered according to a cross‐over, controlled design (E‐EI‐EC, EI‐EC‐E, EC‐E‐EI). Twelve of the 21 patients achieved remission (panic‐free status) during the trial. In 8 cases this occurred after exposure alone (E) and in two cases each after the other treatments (EI and EC). The results revealed a significant effect of the factor time on a number of variables, and the superiority of exposure alone compared to other treatment modalities with regard to some variables. These findings suggest that long‐term behavioural treatment based on exposure may be necessary in some patients, and may induce clinical remission. However, patients who do not respond to exposure show poor tolerance of and compliance with pharmacological treatment, and are unlikely to achieve remission with imipramine or cognitive therapy, even though this may occur in individual cases.
Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 1996
Gianni Savron; Giovanni A. Fava; Silvana Grandi; Chiara Rafanelli; Anna Rita Raffi; Piera Belluardo
Savron G, Fava GA, Grandi S, Rafanelli C, Raffi AR, Belluardo P. Hypochondriacal fears and beliefs in obsessive‐compulsive disorder.
Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics | 1989
Giovanni A. Fava; Silvana Grandi; Gianni Savron; Giovanna Bartolucci; Giuseppe Santarsiero; Giancarlo Trombini; Camillo Orlandi
Psychiatric illness, psychological distress and illness behavior were investigated in 30 hirsute women and 30 nonhirsute healthy control subjects matched for sociodemographic variables. The majority of patients showed a good psychological adaptation to illness: they did not report significantly more anxiety, depression, and abnormal illness behavior than controls. One-sixth of the patients, however, suffered from a clinically meaningful affective disorder. Further, hirsute patients displayed significantly more hostility and irritable mood than controls (p less than 0.01).
Psychopathology | 1996
Giovanni A. Fava; Gianni Savron; Chiara Rafanelli; Silvana Grandi; Renzo Canestrari
Prodromal symptoms were investigated in 30 patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder. The large majority of patients (93%) reported at least one prodromal symptom before disease onset. Generalized anxiety, irritability, indecision, phobic and somatic anxiety occurred in about half of patients. Also common were depressive symptoms such as fatigue, lowered self-esteem, depressed mood, pessimism, impaired work, and guilt. The results suggest a close association of obsessions and compulsions with affective symptoms.
Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry | 1994
Giovanni A. Fava; Silvana Grandi; Piera Belluardo; Gianni Savron; Anna Rita Raffi; S. Conti; Francesco M. Saviotti
1. Benzodiazepines were discontinued in 16 patients who had recovered from panic disorder with agoraphobia after exposure treatment. 2. Drug discontinuation yielded a significant decrease in anxiety sensitivity and state anxiety in these long-term users. 3. Several likely explanations for the findings are discussed. 4. In the short term, treatment of panic disorder with benzodiazepines may lower anxiety symptoms. However, in the long run, it may decrease the individual tolerance to anxiety and discomfort.
Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics | 1989
S. Conti; Gianni Savron; Giovanna Bartolucci; Silvana Grandi; Carlo Magelli; Franco Semprini; Francesco M. Saviotti; Giancarlo Trombini; Giovanni A. Fava; Bruno Magnani
Psychiatric illness according to DSM-III-R criteria was investigated in 54 consecutive patients suffering from cardiac neurosis (neurocirculatory asthenia or Da Costas syndrome). Thirty-seven of the 54 patients (68.5%) were found to suffer from a psychiatric disorder. Generalized anxiety disorder, social phobia and panic disorder accounted for most of the diagnoses. Panic disorder was frequently preceded by (and associated with) generalized anxiety, phobic avoidance and hypochondriasis. The results should alert the physician to inquire for symptoms of an anxiety disorder when a patient presents with cardiac neurosis.
Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 1994
Giovanni A. Fava; Carlo Magelli; Gianni Savron; S. Conti; Giovanna Bartolucci; Silvana Grandi; Franco Semprini; Francesco M. Saviotti; Piera Belluardo; Bruno Magnani
The purpose of this study was to assess the prevalence of mental illness and to evaluate the quality of life of patients with neurocirculatory asthenia. A consecutive series of 80 patients who satisfied the diagnostic criteria developed by Kannel et al. for neurocirculatory asthenia was included in this study. Patients underwent a psychiatric diagnostic research interview and extensive psychometric evaluation, with both observer and self‐rated scales for depression, anxiety, phobic symptoms, quality of life and abnormal illness behavior. In 47 patients (59%), a psychiatric diagnosis (mainly an anxiety disorder) antedated the onset of neurocirculatory asthenia, which was thus defined as secondary, also because cardiorespiratory symptoms were part of the mental symptoms. In the remaining 33 patients (41%) neurocirculatory asthenia was the primary disorder. Patients with secondary neurocirculatory asthenia reported significantly higher levels of anxiety, depression, social phobia, abnormal illness behavior and an impaired quality of life compared with patients with primary neurocirculatory asthenia. This latter did not significantly differ in these variables (except for depression) from healthy control subjects matched for sociodemographic variables. At a 1‐year follow‐up, patients with primary neurocirculatory asthenia had a much better prognosis than those with secondary neurocirculatory asthenia. The results indicate the feasibility of the primary/secondary distinction based on the time of onset of mental and cardiorespiratory symptoms in neurocirculatory asthenia. Since only about one quarter of the patients were found to suffer from decreased energy and fatigue according to specified criteria, the terms neurocirculatory asthenia and effort syndrome should probably be discarded.
Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics | 1989
Gianni Savron; Silvana Grandi; Laura Michelacci; Francesco M. Saviotti; Giovanna Bartolucci; S. Conti; Giancarlo Trombini; Luciano Bovicelli; Camillo Orlandi; Giovanni A. Fava
Illness attitudes were evaluated in 26 pregnant women and 26 control subjects matched for sociodemographic variables, by means of a self-rating scale, on three different occasions. In each trimester of pregnancy, women displayed more hypochondriacal fears and beliefs and conviction of disease (disease phobia) than normal controls (p less than 0.001). The findings should alert physicians to ask their pregnant patients whether they are preoccupied with fear of dying, or are concerned that they suffer from an undiagnosed physical illness, or dread a specific illness such as cancer or heart disease. Hypochondriacal fears and beliefs are liable to affect the well-being and health attitudes of pregnant women. If properly recognized, they may effectively be treated.
European Psychiatry | 1996
Anna Rita Raffi; Gianni Savron; Chiara Rafanelli; S. Conti; Silvana Grandi; Giovanni A. Fava
The relationship of obsessions and compulsions with hypochondriasis is receiving increasing attention, but has not been substantiated by adequate research. The Illness Attitude Scales (IAS), which identify hypochondriacal patients, were administered to 30 patients with DSM-IV obsessive-compulsive disorder and 30 healthy control subjects matched for sociodemographic variables. All IAS scales were significantly higher in patients with obsessions and compulsions. However, there were no significant differences between patients and controls in the number of subjects whose symptom intensity exceeded a clinical threshold for hypochondriasis and disease phobia. Furthermore, hypochondriacal fears and beliefs were poorly correlated with obsessions and compulsions. The results suggest the presence of mild abnormal illness behaviour in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder, unlike the situation in patients with panic disorder and depression.