Department of Psychological Medicine, University of Otago, Christchurch, New Zealand.
Aust N Z J Psychiatry. 2013 Apr;47(4):371-9. doi: 10.1177/0004867412474105. Epub 2013 Jan 22.
Binocular rivalry refers to a situation where contradictory information is presented simultaneously to the same location of each eye. This leads to the alternation of images every few seconds. The rate of alternation between images has been shown to be slower in euthymic participants with bipolar disorder than in healthy controls. The alternation rate is not uniformly slowed in bipolar disorder patients and may be influenced by clinical variables. The present study examined whether bipolar disorder patients have slower alternation rates, examined the influence of depression and explored the role of clinical variables and cognitive functions on alternation rate.
Ninety-six patients with bipolar disorder and 24 control participants took part in the study. Current mood status and binocular rivalry performance were analysed with nonparametric tests. A slow and a normal alternation group were created by median split. We subsequently explored the distribution of several clinical variables across these groups. Further, we investigated associations between alternation rate and various cognitive functions, such as visual processing, memory, attention and general motor speed.
The median alternation rate was significantly slower for participants with bipolar disorder type I (0.39 Hz) and for participants with bipolar spectrum disorder (0.43 Hz) than for control participants (0.47 Hz). Depression had no effect on alternation rate. There were no differences between participants with bipolar disorder type I and type II and in regard to medication regime and predominance of one rivalry image. There were also no differences in regard to the clinical variables and no significant associations between alternation rate and the cognitive functions explored.
We replicated a slowing in alternation rate in some bipolar disorder participants. The alternation rate was not affected by depressed mood or any of the other factors explored, which supports views of binocular rivalry rates as a trait marker in bipolar disorder.
双眼竞争是指同时向每只眼的同一位置呈现相互矛盾的信息的情况。这导致图像每隔几秒钟交替一次。已经表明,双相情感障碍的缓解期参与者的图像交替率比健康对照组慢。双相情感障碍患者的交替率并非均匀减慢,可能受临床变量的影响。本研究检查了双相情感障碍患者是否具有较慢的交替率,检查了抑郁的影响,并探讨了临床变量和认知功能对交替率的作用。
96 名双相情感障碍患者和 24 名对照参与者参加了这项研究。使用非参数检验分析当前的情绪状态和双眼竞争表现。通过中位数分割创建了一个慢交替组和一个正常交替组。随后,我们探索了这些组之间的几个临床变量的分布。此外,我们研究了交替率与各种认知功能(如视觉处理、记忆、注意力和一般运动速度)之间的关联。
与对照组(0.47 Hz)相比,I 型双相情感障碍患者(0.39 Hz)和双相谱障碍患者(0.43 Hz)的中位数交替率明显较慢。抑郁对交替率没有影响。I 型和 II 型双相情感障碍患者、药物治疗方案和一种竞争图像优势之间没有差异。在临床变量方面也没有差异,并且交替率与探索的认知功能之间没有显著关联。
我们在一些双相情感障碍患者中复制了交替率的减慢。交替率不受抑郁情绪或任何其他探索因素的影响,这支持了双眼竞争率作为双相情感障碍的特征标志物的观点。