L. Dell'Osso
University of Pisa
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Featured researches published by L. Dell'Osso.
Schizophrenia Research | 2005
Alfredo Sbrana; L. Dell'Osso; Antonella Benvenuti; Paola Rucci; Paolo Cassano; S. Banti; Chiara Gonnelli; Maria Rosa Doria; Laura Ravani; Sabrina Spagnolli; L. Rossi; Federica Raimondi; M. Catena; Jean Endicott; Ellen Frank; David J. Kupfer; Giovanni B. Cassano
This study evaluates the validity and the reliability of a new instrument developed to assess the psychotic spectrum: the Structured Clinical Interview for the Psychotic Spectrum (SCI-PSY). The instrument is based on a spectrum model that emphasizes soft signs, low-grade symptoms, subthreshold syndromes, as well as temperamental and personality traits comprising the clinical and subsyndromal psychotic manifestations. The items of the interview include, in addition to a subset of the DSM-IV criteria for psychotic syndromes, a number of features derived from clinical experience and from a review of the phenomenological descriptions of psychoses. Study participants were enrolled at 11 Italian Departments of Psychiatry located at 9 sites and included 77 consecutive patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder, 66 with borderline personality disorder, 59 with psychotic mood disorders, 98 with non-psychotic mood disorders and 57 with panic disorder. A comparison group of 102 unselected controls was enrolled at the same sites. The SCI-PSY significantly discriminated subjects with any psychiatric diagnosis from controls and subjects with from those without psychotic disorders. The hypothesized structure of the instrument was confirmed empirically.
Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2015
Claudia Carmassi; Camilla Gesi; M. Corsi; I. Pergentini; Ivan Mirko Cremone; Ciro Conversano; Giulio Perugi; M.K. Shear; L. Dell'Osso
BACKGROUND Increasing literature has been focused on complicated grief (CG) and its distinctiveness from other potentially loss related mental disorders such as major depression (MD). In this regard, symptoms of separation distress seem to play a key role. The aim of this study was to compare the clinical features of CG to those of MD and of CG+MD, with particular attention to separation anxiety. METHODS Fifty patients with CG (26 with and 24 without MD) and 40 with MD were consecutively recruited. Assessments included: SCID-I/P, Inventory of Complicated Grief (ICG), Adult Separation Anxiety Symptom Questionnaire (ASA-27), Work and Social Adjustment Scale (WSAS), Mood Spectrum-Self Report (MOODS-SR)-lifetime version. RESULTS Patients with MD reported significantly higher ASA-27 scores than patients with CG either alone or with MD. In all groups, ASA-27 total scores were significantly correlated with the MOODS-SR total scores and with those of its depressive component and rhythmicity domain. No significant differences were reported in the WSAS scores. LIMITATIONS Major limitations are the small sample size and the use of lifetime instruments. CONCLUSIONS Our results suggest a correlation between adult separation anxiety symptoms and lifetime mood spectrum symptoms both in patients with CG and MD. Further studies are needed to better understand the role of adult separation anxiety in the development of these disorders and for their nosographic autonomy as well.
European Neuropsychopharmacology | 2000
Chiara Pfanner; Donatella Marazziti; L. Dell'Osso; Silvio Presta; Alfredo Gemignani; A. Milanfranchi; Giovanni B. Cassano
&NA; Risperidone, an atypical neuroleptic, has been proposed for augmentation strategies in resistant obsessive‐compulsive disorder (OCD). We report the results of an open‐label trial on the use of the combination of serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SRIs) with risperidone in 20 refractory OCD outpatients. All patients had been suffering from OCD, according to DSM‐IV criteria, for at least 2 years and had various comorbid disorders. All had been treated with a SRI at adequate dosages for at least 6 months, but had failed to respond. Therefore, risperidone was added and the dosage titrated up to the mean dose of 3 mg / day over 8 weeks. After 2 months of this regimen, all patients had shown a reduction in obsessive‐compulsive symptoms, as assessed by the decrease in the Yale‐Brown Obsessive‐Compulsive Scale (Y‐BOCS) total score, particularly those with a lifetime comorbidity with bipolar disorder; only three patients reported mild sedation and postural hypotension, two mild extrapyramidal side‐effects (tremors and akatysia) and two an increased appetite. All these effects were well tolerated and no patient halted the treatment. The addition of risperidone would appear to be a useful strategy for augmenting SRI effectiveness in refractory OCD patients.
Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2018
L. Dell'Osso; Barbara Carpita; Camilla Gesi; Ivan Mirko Cremone; M. Corsi; Enrico Massimetti; D. Muti; E. Calderani; Giovanni Castellini; Mario Luciano; Valdo Ricca; Claudia Carmassi; Mario Maj
AIM Increasingly data suggest a possible overlap between psychopathological manifestations of eating disorders (EDs) and autism spectrum disorders (ASD). The aim of the present study was to assess the presence of subthreshold autism spectrum symptoms, by means of a recently validated instrument, in a sample of participants with EDs, particularly comparing participants with or without binge eating behaviours. METHODS 138 participants meeting DSM-5 criteria for EDs and 160 healthy control participants (HCs), were recruited at 3 Italian University Departments of Psychiatry and assessed by the SCID-5, the Adult Autism Subthreshold Spectrum (AdAS Spectrum) and the Eating Disorders Inventory, version 2 (EDI-2). ED participants included: 46 with restrictive anorexia (AN-R); 24 with binge-purging type of Anorexia Nervosa (AN-BP); 34 with Bulimia Nervosa (BN) and 34 with Binge Eating Disorder (BED). The sample was split in two groups: participants with binge eating behaviours (BEB), in which were included participants with AN-BP, BN and BED, and participants with restrictive behaviours (AN-R). RESULTS participants with EDs showed significantly higher AdAS Spectrum total scores than HCs. Moreover, EDs participants showed significantly higher scores on all AdAS Spectrum domains with the exception of Non verbal communication and Hyper-Hypo reactivity to sensory input for AN-BP participants, and Childhood/Adolescence domain for AN-BP and BED participants. Participants with AN-R scored significantly higher than participants with BEB on the AdAS Spectrum total score, and on the Inflexibility and adherence to routine and Restricted interest/rumination AdAS Spectrum domain scores. Significant correlations emerged between the Interpersonal distrust EDI-2 sub-scale and the Non verbal communication and the Restricted interest and rumination AdAS Spectrum domains; as well as between the Social insecurity EDI-2 sub-scale and the Inflexibility and adherence to routine and Restricted interest and rumination domains in participants with EDs. CONCLUSIONS Our data corroborate the presence of higher subthreshold autism spectrum symptoms among ED participants with respect to HCs, with particularly higher levels among restrictive participants. Relevant correlations between subthreshold autism spectrum symptoms and EDI-2 Subscale also emerged.
Psychological Medicine | 2009
Donatella Marazziti; Isabella Roncaglia; A. Del Debbio; Carolina Bianchi; Gabriele Massimetti; Nicola Origlia; Luciano Domenici; Armando Piccinni; L. Dell'Osso
Social attachment is fundamental for its relevant impact upon survival and reproduction in several animals and particularly so in humans. Recently, much research efforts have been directed towards the understanding of the neurobiological basis of social attachment. Besides oxytocin, vasopressin and specific brain areas, it has also been suggested that neurotrophins (NTs) might be involved. NTs are a family of structurally similar proteins including nerve growth factor (NGF) and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) amongst others, which play an important role in the survival, differentiation and functioning of neurons (Patapoutian & Reichardt, 2001). Preclinical studies suggest that BDNF might be involved in hippocampal degeneration (Duman et al. 1997) following different stressors, such as maternal deprivation (Meaney, 2001). The BDNF changes would render adult animals more vulnerable to exaggerated stress responses and anxious behaviours (Ladd et al. 2004). These findings suggest that BDNF, and perhaps all NTs, might act as mediators to translate the effects of environmental stimuli on the development of the ‘social brain’. A type of social attachment that seems to be peculiar to humans is the so-called ‘romantic attachment ’, which is the establishment of a relationship between two sexual partners (Hazan & Shaver, 1987). Given the lack of information on this topic, we explored the possible relationship between BDNF plasma levels and romantic attachment, as assessed by the Experiences in Close Relationships (ECR) questionnaire (Brennan et al. 1998), a self-report instrument for measuring romantic attachment in adults.
Schizophrenia Research | 2018
Paola Rocca; Silvana Galderisi; Alessandro Rossi; Alessandro Bertolino; Paola Rucci; Dino Gibertoni; Cristiana Montemagni; S. Bellino; Eugenio Aguglia; Mario Amore; Antonello Bellomo; Massimo Biondi; Bernardo Carpiniello; Alessandro Cuomo; Enrico D'Ambrosio; L. Dell'Osso; Paolo Girardi; Carlo Marchesi; Palmiero Monteleone; C. Montemitro; L. Oldani; Francesca Pacitti; Rita Roncone; Alberto Siracusano; Elena Tenconi; Antonio Vita; P. Zeppegno; L. Steardo; A. Vignapiano; Mario Maj
BACKGROUND A general consensus has not yet been reached regarding the role of disorganization symptoms in real-world functioning in schizophrenia. METHODS We used structural equations modeling (SEM) to analyze the direct and indirect associations between disorganization and real-world functioning assessed through the Specific Levels of Functioning Scale (SLOF) in 880 subjects with schizophrenia. RESULTS We found that: 1) conceptual disorganization was directly and strongly connected with SLOF daily activities; difficulty in abstract thinking was associated with moderate strength to all SLOF domains, and poor attention was connected with SLOF work skills; 2) grandiosity was only related with poor work skills, and delusions were associated with poor functioning in all SLOF domains; interpersonal relationships were weakly indirectly influenced by hallucinatory behavior, delusions and unusual thought contents through the mediation of social cognition (SC); 3) among the negative symptoms, avolition had only direct links with SLOF work skills and SLOF activities; anhedonia had direct links with SLOF work skills and SLOF interpersonal and indirect link with SLOF work skills through functional capacity (FC); asociality with SLOF interpersonal; blunted affect had direct links with SLOF activities and indirect links with SLOF interpersonal relationships mediated by SC. Lastly, alogia had only indirect links mediated by SC, FC, and neurocognition (NC). CONCLUSIONS Overall conceptual disorganization is the symptom that contributed more (both directly and indirectly) to the activities of community living in real-world. Thus, it should be considered as a treatment target in intervention programs for patients with schizophrenia.
Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2018
L. Dell'Osso; M. Corsi; Camilla Gesi; Carlo Antonio Bertelloni; Gabriele Massimetti; D. Peroni; Alice Bonuccelli; Alessandro Orsini; Claudia Carmassi
Increasing literature has shown the usefulness of a dimensional approach to mental disorders, particularly when exploring subjects exposed to traumatic experiences such as a severe illness in ones child. Recent evidence suggests an increased vulnerability in subjects with autism spectrum symptoms to develop post-traumatic stress symptoms. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the presence of adult autism subthreshold spectrum in a sample of parents of children with epilepsy and its impact on post-traumatic stress spectrum symptoms in the same study sample. Results revealed noteworthy correlations between post-traumatic stress symptoms and adult autism subthreshold spectrum (AdAS Spectrum) only in the subgroup of the fathers. In particular, were evidenced correlations between AdAS Spectrum domain of rumination and narrow interests and some TALS-SR nuclear domains: reaction to traumatic events, reexperiencing and arousal. These findings corroborate the hypothesis that subthreshold autistic features may influence the possible psychopathological reaction to trauma.
Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology | 2005
Laura Bazzichi; Maser J; Armando Piccinni; Paola Rucci; Del Debbio A; Laura Vivarelli; Catena M; Bouanani S; Merlini G; Bombardieri S; L. Dell'Osso
Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2005
Alfredo Sbrana; Jacopo V. Bizzarri; Paola Rucci; Chiara Gonnelli; Maria Rosa Doria; Sabrina Spagnolli; Laura Ravani; Federica Raimondi; L. Dell'Osso; Giovanni B. Cassano
Cns Spectrums | 2007
Donatella Marazziti; B. Dell'Osso; M Dell'osso Catena; G. Consoli; Del Debbio A; Laura Vivarelli; Francesco Albanese; Armando Piccinni; Paola Rucci; L. Dell'Osso