Dickstein Daniel P, Axelson David, Weissman Alexandra B, Yen Shirley, Hunt Jeffrey I, Goldstein Benjamin I, Goldstein Tina R, Liao Fangzi, Gill Mary Kay, Hower Heather, Frazier Thomas W, Diler Rasim S, Youngstrom Eric A, Fristad Mary A, Arnold L Eugene, Findling Robert L, Horwitz Sarah M, Kowatch Robert A, Ryan Neal D, Strober Michael, Birmaher Boris, Keller Martin B
Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Division of Child-Family Psychiatry, Bradley Hospital, Alpert Medical School of Brown University, East Providence, RI, USA.
PediMIND Program, Bradley Hospital, 1011 Veterans Memorial Parkway, East Providence, RI, 02915, USA.
Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2016 Jun;25(6):625-38. doi: 10.1007/s00787-015-0769-2. Epub 2015 Oct 5.
Greater understanding of cognitive function in children and adolescents with bipolar disorder (BD) is of critical importance to improve our ability to design targeted treatments to help with real-world impairment, including academic performance. We sought to evaluate cognitive performance among children with either BD type I, II, or "not otherwise specified" (NOS) participating in multi-site Course and Outcome of Bipolar Youth study compared to typically developing controls (TDC) without psychopathology. In particular, we sought to test the hypothesis that BD-I and BD-II youths with full threshold episodes of mania or hypomania would have cognitive deficits, including in reversal learning, vs. those BD-NOS participants with sub-threshold episodes and TDCs. N = 175 participants (BD-I = 81, BD-II = 11, BD-NOS = 28, TDC = 55) completed Cambridge Neuropsychological Automated Testing Battery (CANTAB) tasks. A priori analyses of the simple reversal stage of the CANTAB intra-/extra-dimensional shift task showed that aggregated BD-I/II participants required significantly more trials to complete the task than either BD-NOS participants with sub-syndromal manic/hypomanic symptoms or than TDCs. BD participants across sub-types had impairments in sustained attention and information processing for emotionally valenced words. Our results align with prior findings showing that BD-I/II youths with distinct episodes have specific alterations in reversal learning. More broadly, our study suggests that further work is necessary to see the interaction between neurocognitive performance and longitudinal illness course. Additional work is required to identify the neural underpinnings of these differences as targets for potential novel treatments, such as cognitive remediation.
更深入地了解双相情感障碍(BD)儿童和青少年的认知功能对于提高我们设计针对性治疗方法的能力至关重要,这些治疗方法有助于解决现实世界中的功能损害问题,包括学业表现。我们试图评估参与多中心双相情感障碍青少年病程与转归研究的I型、II型或“未另行指定”(NOS)双相情感障碍儿童与无精神病理学症状的正常发育对照(TDC)相比的认知表现。特别是,我们试图检验这样一个假设,即经历过完全阈值躁狂或轻躁狂发作的BD-I和BD-II青少年会存在认知缺陷,包括在逆向学习方面,而那些经历亚阈值发作的BD-NOS参与者和TDC则不存在。N = 175名参与者(BD-I = 81名,BD-II = 11名,BD-NOS = 28名,TDC = 55名)完成了剑桥神经心理自动化测试组(CANTAB)任务。对CANTAB维度内/维度间转换任务的简单逆向阶段进行的先验分析表明,汇总的BD-I/II参与者完成任务所需的试验次数明显多于有亚综合征性躁狂/轻躁狂症状的BD-NOS参与者或TDC。各亚型的BD参与者在对具有情感效价的词语的持续注意力和信息处理方面存在损害。我们的结果与先前的研究结果一致,即经历过明显发作的BD-I/II青少年在逆向学习方面有特定改变。更广泛地说,我们的研究表明,有必要进一步研究神经认知表现与纵向病程之间的相互作用。还需要开展更多工作来确定这些差异的神经基础,作为潜在新治疗方法(如认知康复)的靶点。