1. Neurocognition in young offspring of individuals with bipolar disorder: The role of co-existing familial and clinical high-risk for bipolar disorder.
- Author
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Can G, Bora E, Ildız A, Ulas G, Ongun CH, Sprooten E, Frangou S, Inal NE, and Ozerdem A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Cognition physiology, Executive Function physiology, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Memory, Short-Term, Neuropsychological Tests, Risk Factors, Young Adult, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Child of Impaired Parents psychology, Cognitive Dysfunction psychology
- Abstract
Bipolar disorder (BD) is associated with cognitive dysfunction which has also been reported in offspring of individuals with BD (BDoff). However, it remains unclear whether cognitive underperformance in BDoff is associated with the presence of history of subclinical syndromes associated with risk for BD. To address this knowledge gap we assessed executive function, visual and verbal memory, working memory, processing speed and verbal fluency in 21 offspring with clinical high risk (CHR; BDoff+CHR), 54 offspring without CHR (BDoff-non-CHR), and 50 healthy individuals without familial risk of BD. BDoff underperformed compared to controls in most cognitive tasks. There was no significant neurocognitive difference between BDoff+CHR and BDoff-non-CHR except in the fluency/central executive domain (Cohen's d = 0.60, p = 0.03). Our results suggest that cognitive dysfunction in multiple domains is associated with familial predisposition to BD regardless of CHR status. On the other hand, abnormalities in central executive processes might be more pronounced in BDoff+CHR than BDoff-non-CHR. Further longitudinal studies investigating cognitive trajectory of BDoff and its interaction with the emergence of subclinical syndromes are needed to fully characterize the relationship between cognition and mood dysregulation in BD., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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