Filiberto Fuentenebro | Universidad Complutense de Madrid (original) (raw)
Papers by Filiberto Fuentenebro
Theory and History in the Human and Social Sciences, 2020
In the 1980s Berrios suggested that the psychiatric intellectual framework was rooted in conceptu... more In the 1980s Berrios suggested that the psychiatric intellectual framework was rooted in conceptual premises that were established more than a century ago and also that psychiatric knowledge should always be historical. This is the semiologic task of understanding the development of psychopathology. Here we analyze Berrios’s work along three stages, namely, his initial works, his semiological research, and finally his doctrinal work. Berrios’s work, with its inherent philosophical depth, challenges the current epistemic situation. Through organizing historically and conceptually, both symptoms and clinical practice, his original approach represents the first attempt to structure ideas from the perspective of totality. And, in his work, history arises with a vital and active role, becoming a powerful tool with which to conceptualize and calibrate mental symptoms.
Schizophrenia Research, 2012
The Journal of nervous and mental disease, 2010
The aim of this study was to examine the contents of world views held by patients with current pe... more The aim of this study was to examine the contents of world views held by patients with current persecutory beliefs. We examined whether these beliefs in a just world (BJW) were associated with the severity of psychopathology of participants. Our results showed that, compared with a healthy control group, the current persecutory beliefs group had weaker beliefs in a just world related to themselves (BJW-P), but there were no differences between both groups in their beliefs in general justice in the world (BJW-G). Regression analyses showed that BJW, particularly weaker beliefs in personal justice, significantly associated with more severe symptoms of depression and paranoia as well as with lower scores of psychological well-being. Our results support the relevance of the BJW framework in exploring world views in patients with persecutory beliefs. We discuss the implications of these results for the research and treatment of paranoid ideation.
Schizophrenia Research, 2010
and sharing with colleagues.
Schizophrenia Research, 2010
The aim of this study was to examine the contents of world views held by patients with current pe... more The aim of this study was to examine the contents of world views held by patients with current persecutory beliefs. We examined whether these beliefs in a just world (BJW) were associated with the severity of psychopathology of participants. Our results showed that, compared with a healthy control group, the current persecutory beliefs group had weaker beliefs in a just world related to themselves (BJW-P), but there were no differences between both groups in their beliefs in general justice in the world (BJW-G). Regression analyses showed that BJW, particularly weaker beliefs in personal justice, significantly associated with more severe symptoms of depression and paranoia as well as with lower scores of psychological well-being. Our results support the relevance of the BJW framework in exploring world views in patients with persecutory beliefs. We discuss the implications of these results for the research and treatment of paranoid ideation.
Schizophrenia Research, 2010
Psychiatry Research, 2011
In schizophrenia, poor insight has been associated with negative outcome. In fact, some studies h... more In schizophrenia, poor insight has been associated with negative outcome. In fact, some studies have found insight to be associated with greater treatment adherence and lower levels of symptomatology, as well as better psychosocial functioning. However, others have found that insight into illness is associated with an increase in depression, low self-esteem, and possibly higher risk of suicide. We investigated the relationship between insight and well-being in a sample of 40 people presenting paranoid symptoms and diagnosed with schizophrenia or other psychotic disorder. Independent-samples t-tests revealed that compared to a paranoid group with high insight, paranoid participants with low insight had more self-acceptance, higher sense of autonomy and personal growth, and greater orientation towards gratification. Moderation analyses showed that when experiential avoidance was high, insight into paranoia had a detrimental effect on self-acceptance. Overall, our results support the need to explore which psychological variables moderate insight in patients with persecutory beliefs. We discuss the implications of these results for the research of paranoia.
Journal of Trace Elements in Medicine and Biology, 2011
Trace elements may play an important role in bipolar disorders. The objective of this study is to... more Trace elements may play an important role in bipolar disorders. The objective of this study is to determine serum copper and zinc, blood lead and cadmium and urine lead, cadmium and thallium concentrations in patients diagnosed with bipolar disorders and to compare these levels with those of a healthy control group. A total of 25 patients diagnosed with bipolar disorder and 29 healthy subjects participated in this study. Serum copper and zinc concentrations were measured using flame atomic absorption spectrometry; the blood lead and cadmium concentrations were measured by electrothermal atomization atomic absorption spectrometry with Zeeman background correction; urine lead, cadmium and thallium concentrations were measured by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. Median blood and urine lead and cadmium levels were significantly higher among the bipolar patients than among the control group: Blood lead (μg/dL): patient median: 3.00 (IQR: 1.40-4.20); control median (μg/dL): 2.20 (IQR: 0.90-3.00) p=0.040. Blood cadmium (μg/L): patient median: 0.39 (IQR: 0.10-1.15); control median: 0.10 (IQR: 0.10-0.17) p<0.001. The median of cadmium (μg/L) in patients who smoked (1.20 IQR: 0.44-2.30) was higher than that in non-smokers (0.12 IQR: 0.10-0.34)…
The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 2010
The aim of this study was to examine the contents of world views held by patients with current pe... more The aim of this study was to examine the contents of world views held by patients with current persecutory beliefs. We examined whether these beliefs in a just world (BJW) were associated with the severity of psychopathology of participants. Our results showed that, compared with a healthy control group, the current persecutory beliefs group had weaker beliefs in a just world related to themselves (BJW-P), but there were no differences between both groups in their beliefs in general justice in the world (BJW-G). Regression analyses showed that BJW, particularly weaker beliefs in personal justice, significantly associated with more severe symptoms of depression and paranoia as well as with lower scores of psychological well-being. Our results support the relevance of the BJW framework in exploring world views in patients with persecutory beliefs. We discuss the implications of these results for the research and treatment of paranoid ideation.
History of Psychiatry, 2000
Comprehensive Psychiatry, 1995
The predelusional state (PDS) is defined as the set of psychopathologic events preceding the crys... more The predelusional state (PDS) is defined as the set of psychopathologic events preceding the crystallization of delusions, and includes strange cognitions, moods, conations, and motor acts that may be fleeting and defy description. This review exclusively deals with the historic aspects of PDS. It is noted that during PDS the patient is expected to report experiences for which, on account of their novelty, he may not even have a name. Thus, it is quite likely that according to culture and personal codes and to the conceptual brief of the interviewer, similar experiences might be reported as depersonalization, bodily sensations, dysphoria, changes in perception of reality or time, dissolution of "ego boundaries," etc. It is therefore not surprising that since the 19th century, PDS has been considered a disorder of cognition, emotions, volition, and consciousness.
Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, 2012
British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 2006
Objectives. The purpose of this study was to explore whether explicit and implicit attributional ... more Objectives. The purpose of this study was to explore whether explicit and implicit attributional styles of delusional patients were associated to their clinical state, and whether attributions biases are specific to delusional psychopathology or also appear in other disorders (i.e. depression). Design and methods. A cross-sectional design was used. The sample consisted of 136 participants (40 acute deluded participants, 25 remitted deluded participants, 35 depressed patients and 36 normal controls). The Internal, Personal and Situational Attributions Questionnaire (IPSAQ) and the Pragmatic Inferential Test (PIT) were used to assess explicit and implicit attributional style, respectively. Results. All participants, with the exception of the depressed patients group, showed an externalizing bias (EB) for negative events. Although both acute and remitted deluded patients showed a similar overall pattern of explicit attributions, the personalizing bias (PB) was significantly greater in the acute group. The magnitude of this bias, which was also found in the depressed patients, was significantly related to the patient's degree of severity, as assessed by the total BPRS score (r ¼ :45, p , :001). The results on the implicit attributions were more equivocal, perhaps due the low reliability of the PIT. Conclusions. Attributional biases seem to be a stable characteristic of delusions. Yet, the PB might be a rather unspecific characteristic that varies with the degree of the severity of psychopathology. The implications of these findings for understanding the role of attributional biases in depression and delusion formation are discussed.
Annals of Clinical Psychiatry, 1996
Forty-one mothers and twenty-seven fathers agreed to participate in a 6-week, low-cost, multiple-... more Forty-one mothers and twenty-seven fathers agreed to participate in a 6-week, low-cost, multiple-family psychoeducational intervention in Spain. Their knowledge acquisition, subjective distress, annoyance at patient's behavior, perception of social impact of the patient's illness, expectations about patient's recovery, and family burden were measured before and after the intervention and at 9-month follow-up. Ninety-three percent of the fathers and 78% of the mothers attended four or more classes. Although parents acquired a significant amount of knowledge about the illness, no significant score differences were found immediately after the intervention or at follow-up in the other measures. However, significant father-mother differences were revealed. Compared with mothers, fathers were more optimistic throughout the study about the outcome of the illness, became more aware of the social and financial impact of the illness on the family, and reported feeling less annoyed by the patient's behavior at follow-up. The results indicate that low-cost psychoeducational multiple family groups alone do not decrease family distress and burden. These findings also suggest that psychoeducational interventions need to consider differences in gender and family roles and underline the importance of engaging fathers in treatment.
Schizophrenia Research, 2014
Theory and History in the Human and Social Sciences, 2020
In the 1980s Berrios suggested that the psychiatric intellectual framework was rooted in conceptu... more In the 1980s Berrios suggested that the psychiatric intellectual framework was rooted in conceptual premises that were established more than a century ago and also that psychiatric knowledge should always be historical. This is the semiologic task of understanding the development of psychopathology. Here we analyze Berrios’s work along three stages, namely, his initial works, his semiological research, and finally his doctrinal work. Berrios’s work, with its inherent philosophical depth, challenges the current epistemic situation. Through organizing historically and conceptually, both symptoms and clinical practice, his original approach represents the first attempt to structure ideas from the perspective of totality. And, in his work, history arises with a vital and active role, becoming a powerful tool with which to conceptualize and calibrate mental symptoms.
Schizophrenia Research, 2012
The Journal of nervous and mental disease, 2010
The aim of this study was to examine the contents of world views held by patients with current pe... more The aim of this study was to examine the contents of world views held by patients with current persecutory beliefs. We examined whether these beliefs in a just world (BJW) were associated with the severity of psychopathology of participants. Our results showed that, compared with a healthy control group, the current persecutory beliefs group had weaker beliefs in a just world related to themselves (BJW-P), but there were no differences between both groups in their beliefs in general justice in the world (BJW-G). Regression analyses showed that BJW, particularly weaker beliefs in personal justice, significantly associated with more severe symptoms of depression and paranoia as well as with lower scores of psychological well-being. Our results support the relevance of the BJW framework in exploring world views in patients with persecutory beliefs. We discuss the implications of these results for the research and treatment of paranoid ideation.
Schizophrenia Research, 2010
and sharing with colleagues.
Schizophrenia Research, 2010
The aim of this study was to examine the contents of world views held by patients with current pe... more The aim of this study was to examine the contents of world views held by patients with current persecutory beliefs. We examined whether these beliefs in a just world (BJW) were associated with the severity of psychopathology of participants. Our results showed that, compared with a healthy control group, the current persecutory beliefs group had weaker beliefs in a just world related to themselves (BJW-P), but there were no differences between both groups in their beliefs in general justice in the world (BJW-G). Regression analyses showed that BJW, particularly weaker beliefs in personal justice, significantly associated with more severe symptoms of depression and paranoia as well as with lower scores of psychological well-being. Our results support the relevance of the BJW framework in exploring world views in patients with persecutory beliefs. We discuss the implications of these results for the research and treatment of paranoid ideation.
Schizophrenia Research, 2010
Psychiatry Research, 2011
In schizophrenia, poor insight has been associated with negative outcome. In fact, some studies h... more In schizophrenia, poor insight has been associated with negative outcome. In fact, some studies have found insight to be associated with greater treatment adherence and lower levels of symptomatology, as well as better psychosocial functioning. However, others have found that insight into illness is associated with an increase in depression, low self-esteem, and possibly higher risk of suicide. We investigated the relationship between insight and well-being in a sample of 40 people presenting paranoid symptoms and diagnosed with schizophrenia or other psychotic disorder. Independent-samples t-tests revealed that compared to a paranoid group with high insight, paranoid participants with low insight had more self-acceptance, higher sense of autonomy and personal growth, and greater orientation towards gratification. Moderation analyses showed that when experiential avoidance was high, insight into paranoia had a detrimental effect on self-acceptance. Overall, our results support the need to explore which psychological variables moderate insight in patients with persecutory beliefs. We discuss the implications of these results for the research of paranoia.
Journal of Trace Elements in Medicine and Biology, 2011
Trace elements may play an important role in bipolar disorders. The objective of this study is to... more Trace elements may play an important role in bipolar disorders. The objective of this study is to determine serum copper and zinc, blood lead and cadmium and urine lead, cadmium and thallium concentrations in patients diagnosed with bipolar disorders and to compare these levels with those of a healthy control group. A total of 25 patients diagnosed with bipolar disorder and 29 healthy subjects participated in this study. Serum copper and zinc concentrations were measured using flame atomic absorption spectrometry; the blood lead and cadmium concentrations were measured by electrothermal atomization atomic absorption spectrometry with Zeeman background correction; urine lead, cadmium and thallium concentrations were measured by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. Median blood and urine lead and cadmium levels were significantly higher among the bipolar patients than among the control group: Blood lead (μg/dL): patient median: 3.00 (IQR: 1.40-4.20); control median (μg/dL): 2.20 (IQR: 0.90-3.00) p=0.040. Blood cadmium (μg/L): patient median: 0.39 (IQR: 0.10-1.15); control median: 0.10 (IQR: 0.10-0.17) p<0.001. The median of cadmium (μg/L) in patients who smoked (1.20 IQR: 0.44-2.30) was higher than that in non-smokers (0.12 IQR: 0.10-0.34)…
The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 2010
The aim of this study was to examine the contents of world views held by patients with current pe... more The aim of this study was to examine the contents of world views held by patients with current persecutory beliefs. We examined whether these beliefs in a just world (BJW) were associated with the severity of psychopathology of participants. Our results showed that, compared with a healthy control group, the current persecutory beliefs group had weaker beliefs in a just world related to themselves (BJW-P), but there were no differences between both groups in their beliefs in general justice in the world (BJW-G). Regression analyses showed that BJW, particularly weaker beliefs in personal justice, significantly associated with more severe symptoms of depression and paranoia as well as with lower scores of psychological well-being. Our results support the relevance of the BJW framework in exploring world views in patients with persecutory beliefs. We discuss the implications of these results for the research and treatment of paranoid ideation.
History of Psychiatry, 2000
Comprehensive Psychiatry, 1995
The predelusional state (PDS) is defined as the set of psychopathologic events preceding the crys... more The predelusional state (PDS) is defined as the set of psychopathologic events preceding the crystallization of delusions, and includes strange cognitions, moods, conations, and motor acts that may be fleeting and defy description. This review exclusively deals with the historic aspects of PDS. It is noted that during PDS the patient is expected to report experiences for which, on account of their novelty, he may not even have a name. Thus, it is quite likely that according to culture and personal codes and to the conceptual brief of the interviewer, similar experiences might be reported as depersonalization, bodily sensations, dysphoria, changes in perception of reality or time, dissolution of "ego boundaries," etc. It is therefore not surprising that since the 19th century, PDS has been considered a disorder of cognition, emotions, volition, and consciousness.
Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, 2012
British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 2006
Objectives. The purpose of this study was to explore whether explicit and implicit attributional ... more Objectives. The purpose of this study was to explore whether explicit and implicit attributional styles of delusional patients were associated to their clinical state, and whether attributions biases are specific to delusional psychopathology or also appear in other disorders (i.e. depression). Design and methods. A cross-sectional design was used. The sample consisted of 136 participants (40 acute deluded participants, 25 remitted deluded participants, 35 depressed patients and 36 normal controls). The Internal, Personal and Situational Attributions Questionnaire (IPSAQ) and the Pragmatic Inferential Test (PIT) were used to assess explicit and implicit attributional style, respectively. Results. All participants, with the exception of the depressed patients group, showed an externalizing bias (EB) for negative events. Although both acute and remitted deluded patients showed a similar overall pattern of explicit attributions, the personalizing bias (PB) was significantly greater in the acute group. The magnitude of this bias, which was also found in the depressed patients, was significantly related to the patient's degree of severity, as assessed by the total BPRS score (r ¼ :45, p , :001). The results on the implicit attributions were more equivocal, perhaps due the low reliability of the PIT. Conclusions. Attributional biases seem to be a stable characteristic of delusions. Yet, the PB might be a rather unspecific characteristic that varies with the degree of the severity of psychopathology. The implications of these findings for understanding the role of attributional biases in depression and delusion formation are discussed.
Annals of Clinical Psychiatry, 1996
Forty-one mothers and twenty-seven fathers agreed to participate in a 6-week, low-cost, multiple-... more Forty-one mothers and twenty-seven fathers agreed to participate in a 6-week, low-cost, multiple-family psychoeducational intervention in Spain. Their knowledge acquisition, subjective distress, annoyance at patient's behavior, perception of social impact of the patient's illness, expectations about patient's recovery, and family burden were measured before and after the intervention and at 9-month follow-up. Ninety-three percent of the fathers and 78% of the mothers attended four or more classes. Although parents acquired a significant amount of knowledge about the illness, no significant score differences were found immediately after the intervention or at follow-up in the other measures. However, significant father-mother differences were revealed. Compared with mothers, fathers were more optimistic throughout the study about the outcome of the illness, became more aware of the social and financial impact of the illness on the family, and reported feeling less annoyed by the patient's behavior at follow-up. The results indicate that low-cost psychoeducational multiple family groups alone do not decrease family distress and burden. These findings also suggest that psychoeducational interventions need to consider differences in gender and family roles and underline the importance of engaging fathers in treatment.
Schizophrenia Research, 2014