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Dive into the research topics where Massimiliano Luciani is active.

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Featured researches published by Massimiliano Luciani.


Addictive Behaviors | 2014

Is Internet addiction a psychopathological condition distinct from pathological gambling

Federico Tonioni; Marianna Mazza; Gianna Autullo; Roberta Cappelluti; Valeria Catalano; Giuseppe Marano; Valerio Fiumana; Claudia Moschetti; Flaminia Alimonti; Massimiliano Luciani; Carlo Lai

AIMS The behavioural-addiction perspective suggests that Internet addiction (IA) and pathological gambling (PG) could share similar characteristics with substance dependence. Despite the similarities between IA and PG, it is not clear whether these disorders share different or similar psychopathological conditions. The aim of the present study was to test whether IA patients presented different psychological symptoms, temperamental traits, coping strategies and relational patterns compared with PG patients. The hypothesis was that IA patients will show greater interpersonal disengagement than PG patients. METHODS Two clinical groups (31 IA patients and 11 PG patients) and a control group (38 healthy subjects) matched with the clinical groups for gender and age were enrolled. The clinical groups were gathered in a psychiatric service for IA and PG in a hospital. Anxiety, depression, coping strategies, attachment, temperament, and global assessment of functioning were measured. MANOVAs, ANOVAs and post-hoc comparisons were carried out in order to test the hypothesis. RESULTS Despite IA and PG showing similar differences with the control group on the levels of depression, anxiety and global functioning, the two clinical groups showed different temperamental, coping and social patterns. Specifically IA patients compared with the PG patients showed a greater mental and behavioural disengagement associated with an important interpersonal impairment. The two clinical groups shared an impulsive coping strategy and socio-emotional impairments. CONCLUSIONS Despite IA and PG patients presenting similar clinical symptoms, IA condition was characterised by a more relevant mental, behavioural, and social disengagement compared to PG condition.


Renal Failure | 2015

Attachment style predict compliance, quality of life and renal function in adult patients after kidney transplant: preliminary results

Rosaria Calia; Carlo Lai; Paola Aceto; Massimiliano Luciani; Giovanni Camardese; Silvia Lai; Giara Amato; Valentina Pietroni; Maria Paola Salerno; José Alberto Rodrigues Pedroso; Jacopo Romagnoli; Franco Citterio

Abstract Aim: Aim of this study was to evaluate the association between attachment style, compliance, quality of life and renal function in adult patients after kidney transplantation. Methods: A total of 43 adult patients who received a kidney transplant more than 3 months before were enrolled and were asked to complete two Self-Report questionnaires: Attachment Style Questionnaire (ASQ-40) and Short Form Health Survey (SF-36). Also compliance was measured using appropriate questions. Results: Linear regression analysis showed associations between the confidence in relationships (ASQ-40) and compliance [beta = −0.37; B = −0.02; t(41) = −2.51; p = 0.02]; aspects of anxious attachment style (ASQ-40) and creatinine levels [beta = 0.3; B = 0.13; t(41) = 2.03; p = 0.04]; aspects of avoidant attachment style (ASQ-40) and compliance [beta = −0.37; B = −3.15; t(41) = −2.35; p = 0.02]. Patients who exhibited avoidant attachment had a significantly better perception of their own general health than patients with anxious [F(2,37) = 6.8; p < 0.05] or secure attachment; however, they had a worse perception regarding role limitations due to emotional problems, compared to patients with anxious attachment [F(2,37) = 6.4; p < 0.05]. Discussion: The results of this study suggest that the evaluation of the attachment style in adult kidney transplant patients can contribute to plan a goal-directed psychological support program for these patients, in order to increase their compliance. The association between aspects of anxious attachment style and creatinine level needs more investigations.


American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine | 2014

Predictive Role of Different Dimensions of Burden for Risk of Complicated Grief in Caregivers of Terminally Ill Patients

Carlo Lai; Massimiliano Luciani; Emanuela Morelli; Federico Galli; Roberta Cappelluti; Italo Penco; Paola Aceto; Luigi Lombardo

The aim of the study was to test whether high levels of caregiver burden, as other confirmed predictors, are associated with the risk of prolonged grief disorder in caregivers of terminally ill patients. A predictive study was carried out in order to test the hypothesis. A demographic schedule, the Prolonged Grief 12 (PG-12), the Toronto Alexithymia Scale, Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, and Caregiver Burden Inventory were administered to 60 caregivers of 51 patients who were admitted in Hospice. In the regression analysis, difficulty in recognizing emotions, total burden, depression, and developmental burden dimension were significant predictors of PG-12 levels. Findings showed that feeling of deprivation of existential expectations represents the greater risk factor for the prolonged grief disorder, among the burden dimensions.


Transplantation Proceedings | 2011

Psychological Risk Factors for Graft Rejection Among Liver Transplant Recipients

Rosaria Calia; Carlo Lai; Paola Aceto; Massimiliano Luciani; Carlo Saraceni; Alfonso Wolfango Avolio; Salvatore Agnes

The purpose of this prospective study was to find psychological risk factors predicting acute, chronic, and psychological rejection in patients undergoing liver transplantation using Cognitive Behavioural Assessment (CBA-2.0). The primary scale included an assessment of fears, personality, obsessive-compulsive symptoms, state and trait anxiety, psychological reactions, and depression. We prospectively recruited 44 patients undergoing orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). Exclusion criteria were: education level below secondary school, unstable clinical situation in an out-patient setting, fulminant hepatitis, psychotic disorders, neurocognitive deficits, dementia, serious mental retardation, current alcohol or drug abuse, recent ideation of or attempted suicide, and non-adherence to therapy. CBA-2.0 primary scale series of questionnaires were handed out to patients immediately after the medical examination, which had been performed to ascertain eligibility for OLT. Rejection (acute and/or chronic) was diagnosed according to clinical and histopathological criteria. Psychological rejection was diagnosed when patients declared, after transplantation, a refusal of the new organ which caused psychiatric symptoms requiring medical treatment and/or psychotherapy. Analysis of variance and logistic regression of psychological variables was performed to detect possible risk factors for each type of rejection. A greater fear of repulsive animals was able a predictor for an acute rejection episode (odds ratio=1.1; P<.05). No other psychological pretransplant predictor was noted for chronic or psychological rejection. In patients undergoing OLT, preoperative emotions of fear could predict an acute graft rejection episode. These findings imply that pre-OLT screening should include psychological factors in addition to traditional medical criteria with intervention in selected cases.


Neuroscience Letters | 2014

Neural correlate of the projection of mental states on the not-structured visual stimuli

Massimiliano Luciani; Marco Cecchini; Daniela Altavilla; Letizia Palumbo; Paola Aceto; Giuseppe Ruggeri; Fabrizio Vecchio; Carlo Lai

Projection is a spontaneous and complex mental activity responsible for the subjective meaning attribution. The hypotheses of this study were that the neural correlate of projection may involve frontal, parietal, and temporal brain areas, and that alexithymia may be negatively associated with intensities in limbic and paralimbic areas during projection. EEG data were recorded continuously at 250 Hz using NetStation 4.5.1 with 256-channels HydroCel Geodesic Sensor Net in 20 healthy subjects during the presentation of structured and not-structured visual stimuli. The tasks were paying attention to the stimuli and thinking about the possible meaning of each image. Event related potential (ERP) components and low-resolution electromagnetic tomography (sLoreta) were analyzed. Participants were administered the 20-Item Toronto Alexithymia Scale before stimulus presentation. Source analyses (sLORETA) showed a greater activated source in the left primary somatosensory cortex (BA1) compared to all the others BA in both conditions through all the ERP components. An involvement of the frontal (right-BA4, left- and right-BA9, left-BA11) and parietal (left and right-BA2 and left-BA7) areas was found in projective response to not-structured visual stimuli. Alexithymia levels were negatively correlated with the anterior (right-BA32) and posterior (left-BA29) cingulate cortex. Findings show the relevance of fronto-parieto circuits during projection, where the internally generating somatosensory representations could drive an intermodal meaning attribution during the task. Moreover, high alexithymia levels were associated with a reduced activation of the cingulated cortex.


Transplantation Proceedings | 2011

Effects of switching from twice-daily to once-daily tacrolimus formulation on quality of life, anxiety, and transplant benefit perception after kidney transplantation

Rosaria Calia; Carlo Lai; Paola Aceto; Massimiliano Luciani; Jacopo Romagnoli; Silvia Lai; Antonio Gargiulo; Franco Citterio

OBJECTIVE This study investigated whether switching from the twice-daily (Prograf; TAC) to the once-daily formulation of tacrolimus with extended release (Advagraf; XL) affected quality of life, anxiety, and transplant benefit perception after allogeneic kidney transplantation. METHODS After local Institutional Review Board approval, 78 adult patients prescribed twice-daily tacrolimus for ≥1 year after kidney transplantation were asked to participate in this study. All patients were evaluated at T0 (before the switch), and the 49 who accepted the change were reassessed after 6 months (T1). The following tests were used: (State and Trait Anxiety Inventories Y1 and Y2, (Psychologic General Well-Being Index), and modified Transplant Effect Questionnaire for posttransplantation symptoms. Blood samples for laboratory profiles and determinations of drug concentrations were obtained throughout the study period. RESULTS There were no significant differences between the psychologic variables at T0 among patients who switched from TAC to XL (n=49) versus those who did not participate (n=29). Eight of the 49 patients who accepted the drug conversion were reswitched to TAC because of adverse events. At T1, the remaining switched patients (n=41) showed an increase in the disclosure of having undergone transplantation (P<.05) versus nonswitched patients; whereas reswitched patients (n=8) showed less positivity and well-being (P<.05) compared with those who remained in the switched regimen. CONCLUSION The findings suggested increased disclosure of having undergone transplantation among patients who decided to switch from TAC to XL.


American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine | 2015

Attachment Style Dimensions Can Affect Prolonged Grief Risk in Caregivers of Terminally Ill Patients With Cancer

Carlo Lai; Massimiliano Luciani; Federico Galli; Emanuela Morelli; Roberta Cappelluti; Italo Penco; Paola Aceto; Luigi Lombardo

Objective: The aim of the present study was to evaluate the predictive role of attachment dimensions on the risk of prolonged grief. Sixty caregivers of 51 terminally ill patients with cancer who had been admitted in a hospice were selected. Methods: Caregivers were interviewed using Attachment Scale Questionnaire, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale, and Prolonged Grief Disorder 12 (PG-12). Results: The consort caregivers showed higher PG-12 level compared to the sibling caregivers. Anxiety, depression, need for approval, and preoccupation with relationships levels were significantly correlated with PG-12 scores. Conclusion: Female gender, high levels of depression, and preoccupation with relationships significantly predicted higher levels of prolonged grief risk.


American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine | 2017

Spirituality and Awareness of Diagnoses in Terminally Ill Patients With Cancer

Carlo Lai; Massimiliano Luciani; Federico Galli; Emanuela Morelli; Francesca Del Prete; Patrizia Ginobbi; Italo Penco; Paola Aceto; Luigi Lombardo

Objective: Aims of the present study were to investigate the association between awareness of own illness condition and psychological outcome in end-of-life phase and to test the association between the spirituality and the awareness of own illness condition. Methods: Three hundred and ninety-nine terminally ill patients with cancer were enrolled in a hospice in central Italy. One hundred patients satisfied the inclusion criteria. The Systems of Belief Inventory, the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, and a psychological interview to determine the level of awareness of the illness diagnosis (aware; partially aware; and not aware) were administered to terminally ill patients. Results: The main finding was that the awareness of one’s own illness condition was positively associated with the extrinsic spirituality and negatively associated with intrinsic spirituality (regression model R = .26; R2 = .07; adjusted R2 = .05; F2, 97 = 3.45; P = .036). The aware group showed lower anxiety and depression (F2, 97 = 1.9; P = . 075; F2, 97 = 2.6; P = .04) scores than partially aware and not aware groups. The psychological outcome was not associated with the spirituality level. Conclusion: In terminally ill patients with cancer, the levels of depression and anxiety were lower in patients aware of their own illness state. Moreover, higher levels of extrinsic and lower levels of intrinsic spirituality predicted the awareness of one’s own illness state.


Journal of Mental Health | 2017

Persistent complex bereavement disorder in caregivers of terminally ill patients undergoing supportive-expressive treatment: a pilot study

Carlo Lai; Massimiliano Luciani; Federico Galli; Emanuela Morelli; Federica Moriconi; Italo Penco; Paola Aceto; Luigi Lombardo

Abstract Background: The proposal of persistent complex bereavement disorder (PCBD) in the DSM-V increased the interest on the impact of grief on the psychological health. Aims: Investigating the time course of psychological symptoms, emotional and social abilities in caregivers (undergoing or not to supportive-expressive treatment) of terminally ill cancer patients from 1 months before loss to 14 months after it. Method: Thirty-three of 60 caregivers were assessed by PG-12, HAM-A, HAM-D, TAS-20 and ASQ, at the admission in Hospice, and after 3, 10 and 14 months from the loss. Twelve caregivers adhered to follow a supportive-expressive treatment and 21 caregivers did not. Results: PG-12, anxiety, and depression scores decreased in both groups over time. The score of difficulty in identifying emotions and confidence with closeness decreased significantly only in the treated-group. PG-12 score at T0 was able to predict the DSM V diagnosis of PCBD at T3. Conclusions: Findings showed a decrease of the anxiety, depression, security in the attachment style and an increase of the ability to identify emotions during the first year after loss in caregivers of terminally ill cancer patients. Pre-loss assessment of prolonged grief risk seems useful to predict the diagnosis of PCBD 1 year after loss.


European Journal of Cancer Care | 2018

Psychological impairments burden and spirituality in caregivers of terminally ill cancer patients

Carlo Lai; Massimiliano Luciani; C. Di Mario; F. Galli; Emanuela Morelli; P. Ginobbi; Paola Aceto; Luigi Lombardo

The role of spirituality on the psychological health was mostly investigated through studies conducted in terminally ill patients. However, there are not studies investigating the role of religious and spiritual beliefs on psychological state and on burden dimensions in caregivers. The purpose of this study was to investigate the association between spirituality, burden, and psychological state in caregivers of terminally ill cancer patients. Two hundred caregivers of terminally ill patients with cancer were interviewed using Prolonged Grief Disorder 12 (PG-12), Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale (HAM-A), Hamilton Depression Scale (HAM-D), Caregiver Burden Inventory (CBI) and System of Belief Inventory (SBI-15R). The caregiver burden was positively correlated with anxiety, depression and PG-12 scores. The intrinsic spirituality was a significant predictor of the time-dependence burden (positively associated); and of the emotional burden (negatively associated). In caregivers of terminally ill cancer patients, higher levels of intrinsic spirituality predicted a higher amount of time devote to caregiving, and also protected against the emotional distress linked to providing assistance.

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Carlo Lai

Sapienza University of Rome

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Paola Aceto

The Catholic University of America

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Silvia Lai

Sapienza University of Rome

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Rosaria Calia

The Catholic University of America

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Franco Citterio

The Catholic University of America

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Daniela Altavilla

Sapienza University of Rome

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Jacopo Romagnoli

The Catholic University of America

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Marianna Mazza

The Catholic University of America

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Fernando Bellizzi

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Roberta Cappelluti

Sapienza University of Rome

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