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Neuropsychological functions in patients with bipolar I and bipolar II disorder

Authors :
Hui-Chun Chen
I-Hui Lee
Tzung-Lieh Yeh
Yi-Syuan Wu
Jo Yung-Wei Wu
Huei Chen Ko
Sheng Yu Lee
Yen Kuang Yang
Ru Band Lu
Yih-Lynn Hsiao
Min-Hsien Hsu
Source :
Bipolar disorders. 11(5)
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Objectives: The literature reports persistent cognitive impairments in patients with bipolar disorder even after prolonged remission. However, a majority of studies have focused only on bipolar I disorder (BP-I), primarily because bipolar II disorder (BP-II) is often underdiagnosed or misdiagnosed. More attention should be paid to the differences between BP-I and BP-II, especially the aspects of neuropsychological functioning. We examined the different neuropsychological functions in BP-I and BP-II patients and compared them with those of healthy controls. Methods: The study included 67 patients with interepisode bipolar disorder (BP-I: n = 30; BP-II: n = 37) and 22 healthy controls compared using a battery of neuropsychological tests that assessed memory, psychomotor speed, and certain aspects of frontal executive function. Results: The BP-I group performed poorly on verbal memory, psychomotor speed, and executive function compared to the BP-II and control groups. Both bipolar groups performed significantly less well than the control group on measures of working memory and psychomotor speed, while the BP-II group showed an intermediate level of performance in psychomotor speed compared to the BP-I and control groups. There was no difference between the groups on visual memory. Conclusions: BP-I was characterized by reduced performance in verbal memory, working memory, psychomotor speed, and executive function, while BP-II patients showed a reduction only in working memory and psychomotor speed. Cognitive impairment existed in both subtypes of bipolar disorder, and was greater in BP-I patients. Rehabilitation interventions should take into account potential cognitive differences between these bipolar subtypes.

Details

ISSN :
13995618
Volume :
11
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bipolar disorders
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ea656dc21c5148a9b6c045dd8507f3da