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    Psychol Med. 2000 Mar;30(2):467-72.

    Cognitive vulnerability in patients with bipolar disorder.

    Source

    University Department of Psychological Medicine, Gartnavel Royal Hospital, Glasgow.

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND:

    No study has simultaneously explored key components of Beck's model of cognitive vulnerability to depression in people with bipolar disorders.

    METHODS:

    We compared 41 euthymic bipolar patients with 20 healthy control subjects. All subjects were assessed on the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression, the Autobiographical Memory Test and the Mean Ends Problem-Solving procedure and also completed the Beck Depression Inventory, the Dysfunctional Attitude Scale, the Sociotropy Autonomy Scale and the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Questionnaire.

    RESULTS:

    In comparison to control subjects, patients with bipolar disorder demonstrated significantly higher levels of dysfunctional attitudes (particularly perfectionism and need for approval) and sociotropy, significantly greater over-general recall on an autobiographical memory test and significantly less ability to generate solutions to social problem-solving tasks. These between group differences remained significant when age, intelligence, latency to respond to autobiographical memory test cue words, and subjective mood ratings were included as co-variates in the statistical analysis. Within the patient group, cognitive dysfunction was significantly correlated with level of morbidity (as measured by number of previous illness episodes).

    CONCLUSIONS:

    This study suggests that cognitive vulnerability in patients with bipolar disorder is similar to that described in unipolar disorders. It is not clear whether this dysfunction is a cause or an effect of repeated episodes of bipolar disorder. However, the findings may have implications for clinical treatment as well as suggesting a number of important new avenues of research into psychological models of affective disorder.

    PMID:
    10824667
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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