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Dive into the research topics where Luis Rojo-Moreno is active.

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Featured researches published by Luis Rojo-Moreno.


Eating Disorders | 2013

Teasing and disordered eating behaviors in Spanish adolescents.

Luis Rojo-Moreno; Teresa Rubio; Javier Plumed; María D. Barberá; Marisa Serrano; Natalia Gimeno; Llanos Conesa; Elías Ruiz; Luis Rojo-Bofill; Luis Beato; Lorenzo Livianos

The purpose of this study is to investigate the associations between peer teasing and body dissatisfaction (BD), emotional symptoms, drive for thinness (DT), and abnormal eating behaviors, as well as to analyze the mediating role of gender and body mass index (BMI) in such disorders. We screened 57,997 school children between 13 and 16 years of age. Scores in weight-related teasing and competency-related teasing were higher among girls, as well as overweight or obese individuals. Weight-teasing correlated more strongly with abnormal eating attitudes and behaviors, whereas competency-teasing correlated with emotional symptoms. Multiple linear regression analysis showed that weight-teasing is significantly and independently associated with BD, especially in boys. Multivariate analysis revealed a significant association between weight-teasing and abnormal eating in girls, although its predictive value was very low (Exp(B) = 1.009). Mediation analysis and Path analysis showed the mediating role of DT in this association. Interventions on teasing do not seem to be a priority in eating disorder prevention programs.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2015

Prevalence and comorbidity of eating disorders among a community sample of adolescents: 2-year follow-up

Luis Rojo-Moreno; Pilar Arribas; Javier Plumed; Natalia Gimeno; Ana García-Blanco; Francisco J. Vaz-Leal; María Luisa Vila; Lorenzo Livianos

The previous literature about comorbidity between eating disorders (ED) and other DSM-IV psychiatric disorders in adolescence has employed cross-sectional studies with clinical samples, where the comorbid disorders were diagnosed retrospectively. The present study aims to overcome these limitations by the analysis of comorbidity in a community population during 2-year follow-up. A semi-structured interview was applied to a teenager sample. Firstly, a cross-sectional and non-randomized study on psychiatric morbidity was conducted with 993 teenagers between the ages of 12 and 16 from five schools. Secondly, 326 students between 14 and 17 years old of one school were reassessed 2 years later in order to detect ED new cases and find associations with previous psychiatric disorders. The ED prevalence was 3.6%. Cross-sectional analysis revealed that 62.9% of individuals with an ED had comorbid disorders: anxiety disorders (51.4%), Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (31.4%), oppositional defiant disorder (11.4%), and obsessive compulsive disorder (8.6%). Prospective longitudinal analysis showed an ED incidence rate of 2.76% over the course of 2 years. 22.2% of new cases had received previous psychiatric diagnoses, of which all were anxiety disorders. Thus, ED exhibited a high comorbidity rate among adolescent populations and anxiety disorders were the most common comorbid diagnosis.


Personality and Individual Differences | 2003

Construct validity of retrospective perception of parental relating scales: EMBU and PBI

Lorenzo Livianos-Aldana; Luis Rojo-Moreno

The most frequently used questionnaires for the characterisation of rearing, the EMBU and the PBI, offer different factorial solutions. The aim of the present study is to evaluate the validity of the construct of both rearing scales. We start with the replies of 738 subjects to the two scales to test their construct validity. The models, which have been internationally accepted, derived from both scales and are subjected to a Structural Equation Modelling Method. Although (from a formal point of view) there is little difference between the two models analysed, the trifactorial model of EMBU shows a closer fit to the data. The trifactorial solution of the EMBU seems more adequate than the bifactorial of the PBI. The origin of the factorial solutions of both models and the consequences of these results are discussed.


European Eating Disorders Review | 2015

Neurobiological and Clinical Variables Associated with Alcohol Abuse in Bulimia Nervosa

Francisco J. Vaz-Leal; María Isabel Ramos-Fuentes; Laura Rodríguez-Santos; Isabel S. Flores-Mateos; Andrés Franco-Zambrano; Luis Rojo-Moreno; Luis Beato-Fernández

The study was aimed at analysing the reciprocal relationships of several clinical and neurobiological items in order to predict alcohol misuse in patients with bulimia nervosa (BN). Seventy BN patients and 70 healthy controls were assessed for depression, impulsivity, borderline personality traits and self-defeating behaviours using specific scales; serum cortisol and 24-hour urinary excretion of serotonin and 5-hydroxiindolacetic acid were also assessed. The study confirmed the implications of these clinical factors for alcohol misuse in BN patients, but the results suggested that depressive symptoms and hypercortisolism could lie behind these relationships.


Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2014

The role of temperament and character in the outcome of depressive mood in eating disorders

Teresa Rodríguez-Cano; Luis Beato-Fernández; Luis Rojo-Moreno; Francisco J. Vaz-Leal

OBJECTIVES The aims were to see which temperament and character dimensions were associated with depression, mainly with its outcome at two-year follow up in eating disorders (EDs). METHODS Participants (N=151) were 44 Anorexia nervosa (AN), 55 Bulimia nervosa (BN) and 52 Eating disorders not otherwise specified (EDNOS) patients. The Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), State and Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), Rosenberg Self Esteem Questionnaire (RSE), Eating Disorder Inventory (EDI-2) and Temperament and Character Inventory (TCI) were administered. RESULTS Depression at the beginning (t0) was severe in 22% of the cases. Harm Avoidance and Novelty Seeking had an effect on depressed mood at t0, mediated by Ineffectiveness. Responsibility (SD1) was associated with scores on the BDI at two-year follow up (β=-0.37, 95% CI -2.6, -0.6, p<0.01). CONCLUSION The evaluation of personality dimension in EDs has therapeutic and prognostic implications: To enhance self-efficacy and self-directness is crucial for good clinical outcome.


European Eating Disorders Review | 2011

Auditory hallucinations in anorexia nervosa

Luis Rojo-Moreno; José Javier Plumed; María Barberá Fons; José Carlos Gonzalez-Piqueras; Luis Rojo-Bofill; Lorenzo Livianos

The paper describes two case studies of patients with anorexia nervosa who suffer from auditory hallucinations as the only psychotic symptom. A review of the literature regarding clinical cases of anorexic patients with hallucinations is discussed. Hallucinations in anorexic patients are conceptualized according to different theoretical models which point to a dimensional view of eating disorders.


Assessment | 2018

Is Small Still Beautiful for the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire? Novel Findings Using Exploratory Structural Equation Modeling

Luis Eduardo Garrido; Juan Ramón Barrada; José Armando Aguasvivas; Agustín Martínez-Molina; Víctor B. Arias; Hudson Fernandes Golino; Eva Legaz; Gloria Ferrís; Luis Rojo-Moreno

During the present decade a large body of research has employed confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) to evaluate the factor structure of the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) across multiple languages and cultures. However, because CFA can produce strongly biased estimations when the population cross-loadings differ meaningfully from zero, it may not be the most appropriate framework to model the SDQ responses. With this in mind, the current study sought to assess the factorial structure of the SDQ using the more flexible exploratory structural equation modeling approach. Using a large-scale Spanish sample composed of 67,253 youths aged between 10 and 18 years (M = 14.16, SD = 1.07), the results showed that CFA provided a severely biased and overly optimistic assessment of the underlying structure of the SDQ. In contrast, exploratory structural equation modeling revealed a generally weak factorial structure, including questionable indicators with large cross-loadings, multiple error correlations, and significant wording variance. A subsequent Monte Carlo study showed that sample sizes greater than 4,000 would be needed to adequately recover the SDQ loading structure. The findings from this study prevent recommending the SDQ as a screening tool and suggest caution when interpreting previous results in the literature based on CFA modeling.


Revista de Psiquiatría y Salud Mental | 2017

Influencias genéticas y ambientales en rasgos psicológicos y actitudes alimentarias en una población escolar española

Luis Rojo-Moreno; Carmen Iranzo-Tatay; Natalia Gimeno-Clemente; Maria Antonia Barberá-Fons; Luis Rojo-Bofill; Lorenzo Livianos-Aldana

INTRODUCTION The heritability of eating disorders has been estimated to range from 22% to over 62%.The aim of this study is to determine the relative influence of genetics and environment that contribute to the drive for thinness, body dissatisfaction, perfectionism, and ineffectiveness, by evaluating sex differences in a sample of adolescent twins from Valencia, Spain. MATERIAL AND METHODS Five hundred eighty-four pairs of adolescent twins between 13 and 18 years of age completed the study. To determine zygosity, teachers responded to a questionnaire on physical similarity. Psychological traits of eating disorders were assessed with four sub-scales of the Eating Disorder Inventory (EDI); drive for thinness, body dissatisfaction, perfectionism, and ineffectiveness. Twin models were used to assess genetic and environmental (common and unique) factors affecting these four psychological traits. RESULTS All four traits showed significant genetic contributions among girls, with heritability estimates of 37.7% for ineffectiveness, 42.8% for perfectionism, 56.9% for drive for thinness, and 65.5% for body dissatisfaction. Among boys, body dissatisfaction showed no additive genetic contributions, indicating significant shared and individual specific environment effects. The three other traits in boys showed significant additive genetic contributions, but were lower than in girls. CONCLUSIONS With the exception of body dissatisfaction in boys, psychological traits of eating disorders show heritability patterns that differ according to sex.


Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 2016

Is Hypoesthesia of the Malleolus a Subtle Neurological Sign in Anxiety

Lorenzo Livianos; Ana García-Blanco; Montserrat Civera; Pablo I. González-Valls; Humberto Echevarría; Juan Miguel García-Moncho; Joana Catalina Cardozo; Rocío Castell; César Jávega; José Manuel Matamoros; Gemma Rubio; Luis Rojo-Moreno

This study examined the presence of neurological soft signs, an accessible diagnostic instrument, in patients with anxiety. Individuals with anxiety were more likely to manifest hypoesthesia than healthy controls, and patients who showed hypoesthesia exhibited greater symptoms of anxiety and depression.


Revista de Psiquiatría y Salud Mental | 2014

Papel de la depresión y la impulsividad en la psicopatología de la bulimia nerviosa

Francisco J. Vaz-Leal; Laura Rodríguez-Santos; M. Angustias García-Herráiz; Carlos A. Chimpén-López; Luis Rojo-Moreno; Luis Beato-Fernández; María Isabel Ramos-Fuentes

INTRODUCTION The study aimed to analyze the role of depression and impulsivity in the psychopathology of bulimia nervosa (BN). MATERIALS AND METHODS Seventy female patients with DSM-IV BN, purging subtype, were assessed for eating-related symptoms, body dissatisfaction, affective symptoms, impulsivity, and personality traits. Factor analysis and structural equation modeling methods were used for statistical analysis. RESULTS BN appeared as a condition which incorporated 5 general dimensions: a) binge eating and compensatory behaviours; b) restrictive eating; c) body dissatisfaction; d) dissocial personality traits; and e) a cluster of features which was called «emotional instability» The 5 obtained dimensions can be grouped into 2 basic factors: body dissatisfaction/eating behaviour and personality traits/psychopathology. The first one contains the clinical items used for the definition of BN as a clinical condition in the DSM-V and the International Classification of Diseases 10, and reflects the morphology and the severity of the eating-related symptoms. The second dimension includes a cluster of symptoms (depressive symptoms, impulsivity, and borderline, self-defeating and dissocial personality traits) which could be regarded as the «psychopathological core» of BN and may be able to condition the course and the prognosis of BN.

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Luis Rojo-Bofill

Instituto Politécnico Nacional

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Carmen Iranzo-Tatay

Instituto Politécnico Nacional

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