Journal
BIPOLAR DISORDERS
Volume 14, Issue 5, Pages 527-536Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1399-5618.2012.01032.x
Keywords
bipolar disorder; cognition; executive function
Categories
Funding
- Heinz C. Prechter Bipolar Research Fund at the University of Michigan Depression Center
- K-23 Career Development Award [MH074459]
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Ryan KA, Vederman AC, McFadden EM, Weldon AL, Kamali M, Langenecker SA, McInnis MG. Differential executive functioning performance by phase of bipolar disorder. Bipolar Disord 2012: 14: 527536. (c) 2012 The Authors. Journal compilation (c) 2012 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Objective: This study examined the influence of illness phase on executive functioning performance using factor-derived cognitive scores in a cross-sectional design. Methods: Healthy control (HC) subjects (n = 57), and euthymic (E-BD) (n = 117), depressed (D-BD) (n = 73), and hypomanic/mixed (HM/M-BD) (n = 26) patients with bipolar disorder (BD) were evaluated using executive functioning measures (Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, Trail Making TestParts A and B, Verbal Fluency, Parametric Go/No-Go, Stroop, and Digit Symbol) comprising Conceptual Reasoning and Set-Shifting (CRSS), Processing Speed with Interference Resolution (PSIR), Verbal Fluency and Processing Speed (VFPS), and Inhibitory Control (IC) factor scores. Results: Two of the four executive functioning factors were significantly different between groups based upon phase of illness. The HM/M group was significantly worse than both of the other BD groups and the HC group in IC. The VFPS factor was sensitive to the active phase of BD, with the HM/M-BD and D-BD groups worse than HC. Extending our prior work, the PSIR factor, and now the CRSS factor were significantly worse in BD relative to HC, irrespective of phase of illness. Conclusions: Phase of illness had differential cognitive profiles in executive functioning factors, even after considering and excluding the impact of clinical features, illness characteristics, medications, and demographics. Consolidating executive functioning tasks into reliable factor scores provides unique information to measure and define cognitive deficiencies throughout phases of BD, and to measure intermediate phenotypes in BD, and may aid in tracking and clarifying treatment focus.
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