Title of article
Neurocognitive functioning in young high-risk offspring having a parent with bipolar I disorder
Author/Authors
DEVECİ, Erdem Bezmialem Vakıf University - Faculty of Medicine - Department of Psychiatry, Turkey , OZAN, Erol Atatürk University - Faculty of Medicine - Department of Psychiatry, TURKEY , KIRPINAR, İsmet Bezmialem Vakıf University - Faculty of Medicine - Department of Psychiatry, Turkey , ORAL, Meltem Atatürk University - Faculty of Medicine - Department of Psychiatry, Turkey , DALOĞLU, Ali Gökhan Palandöken State Hospital - Department of Psychiatry, Turkey , AYDIN, Nazan Atatürk University - Faculty of Medicine - Department of Psychiatry, Turkey , ÖZTÜRK, Ahmet Regional Training and Research Hospital - Department of Psychiatry, Turkey
From page
110
To page
117
Abstract
Aim: To investigate attention, memory, verbal-linguistic ability, and executive functions in symptom-free young offspring having a parent with bipolar I disorder (BD1O) in comparison with healthy controls (CO).Materials and methods: Thirty symptom-free BD1O and 37 CO were recruited. The groups (both all participants and those ≥11 years of age) were well-matched for age, sex, IQ, and years of education. The neurocognitive battery included the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning and Memory Test, Controlled Word Association Test, Digit Span Test, Trail Making Test, Auditory Consonant Trigram Test, Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, Stroop Test, and Test of Variables of Attention.Results: The BD1O group demonstrated impairments in psychomotor speed, focused attention, verbal attention, phonemic verbal fluency, short-term memory, and learning functions and performed marginally worse in divided attention, information processing, and working memory. No group difference was found in sustained attention, executive functions, or alternating attention.Conclusion: Divided attention, information processing, and working memory seem to be important in evaluating the cognitive pathology before the onset of affective psychopathology.
Keywords
Bipolar I disorder , offspring , high , risk , neurocognitive functioning , endophenotype
Journal title
Turkish Journal of Medical Sciences (TJMS)
Journal title
Turkish Journal of Medical Sciences (TJMS)
Record number
2529882
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