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Gender influences the detection of spatial working memory deficits in bipolar disorder
Author(s) -
Barrett Suzanne Lucia,
Kelly Christopher,
Bell Robert,
King David John
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
bipolar disorders
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.285
H-Index - 129
eISSN - 1399-5618
pISSN - 1398-5647
DOI - 10.1111/j.1399-5618.2008.00592.x
Subject(s) - neurocognitive , endophenotype , bipolar disorder , psychology , executive functions , working memory , audiology , cognitive flexibility , verbal fluency test , spatial memory , clinical psychology , neuropsychology , cambridge neuropsychological test automated battery , developmental psychology , cognition , medicine , mood , psychiatry
Objective: Despite evidence that gender may influence neurocognitive functioning, few studies have examined its effects in bipolar disorder (BD) a priori . The aim of this study was to examine how gender influences executive‐type functions, which are potentially useful as endophenotypes for BD. Methods: The performance of 26 euthymic patients (12 males, 14 females) with DSM‐IV BD (20 BD type I and six BD type II) was compared to that of 26 controls (12 males, 14 females) on tests of executive function. Controls were matched to patients on an individual basis for sex, age and premorbid IQ. Tests assessed spatial working memory (SWM), planning, attentional set‐shifting and verbal fluency. Results: Overall, patients showed deficits in SWM strategy (p < 0.001) and made more SWM errors relative to controls (p < 0.001). These deficits were more apparent in male‐only comparisons (both p < 0.001) than in female‐only comparisons (both p < 0.05). When examined in isolation, male controls were significantly better at performing the SWM task than female controls (both p < 0.05). This pattern was not observed in the patient cohort: male patients had poorer strategy scores than female patients (p < 0.05), but made a similar number of SWM errors. Conclusions: These findings provide evidence that gender can influence the detection of SWM deficits in the euthymic phase of BD, as the sex‐related disequilibrium in SWM identified in healthy controls was disrupted in BD.