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Neuropsychological impairment in bipolar I disorders in the euthymic state

ABSTRACT
Over the last few years Bipolar Disorder has been associated with chronic neuropsychological
deficits that remain even when episodes of depression, mania or hypomania remit.
Furthermore Bipolar Disorder has been associated with progressive cognitive impairment,
leading to the description of the illness as chronic and deteriorating, rather than as an illness
with discreet episodes from which patients can fully recover. The results of
neuropsychological studies have been criticized for methodological weaknesses however.
The present study attempted to address these weaknesses. The aim was primarily to
establish whether neuropsychological impairment exists in euthymic patients, and secondarily,
to establish if neuropsychological functioning deteriorates with illness severity. Sixteen
euthymic Bipolar I disordered patients were matched for age and sex to 16 controls and
subjected to a battery of neuropsychological tests. Matched pair T-tests were used to identify
if significant differences in neuropsychological functioning existed between the two groups.
The ANOVA technique was used to determine if neuropsychological functioning deteriorated
with illness severity. Markers of illness severity utilised in this study were number of
depressive episodes, number of manic episodes, number of suicide attempts and number of
hospitalisations. The results indicated that neuropsychological differences between the
patient and control group were minimal and not clinically significant. The present study
sample was medically and psychologically well managed and enjoyed good support
structures and their neuropsychological functioning did not deteriorate with illness severity. It
was concluded that the sample size and the nature of the sample selected could perhaps
have affected the study outcome. It was therefore hypothesized that bipolar disorder is not a
homogenous group and that protective factors may exist which affect the course and outcome
of the illness. These protective factors should be the subject of further investigation as they
are likely to significantly impact on the natural history of this disease process.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:wits/oai:wiredspace.wits.ac.za:10539/4930
Date05 June 2008
CreatorsStrijdom, Sonet Christina
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Format13467 bytes, 366777 bytes, 50296 bytes, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf

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