Objective: Studies exploring neuropsychological functions of bipolar disorder (BP) specifically include patients comorbid with alcohol abuse (AB), alcohol dependence (AD), or both (AB/AD). Contradictory assessments of neuropsychological impairment may be caused by not excluding the confounding effects of comorbid AB/AD. Most of the literature discusses BP without subtyping, which overlooks that BP-II may be a valid diagnosis different from BP-I. Because neuropsychological functions are involved in overall BP-II outcomes, we hypothesized that the neuropsychological functions of patients with BP-II comorbid with AD (BP(+AD)) are significantly different from and more impaired than those of patients with BP-II not comorbid with AD (BP(-AD)).
Methods: Using DSM-IV criteria, the study included 69 patients with BP-II (19 with BP(+AD); 28 with BP(-AD)) and 22 healthy controls compared using a battery of neuropsychological tests that assessed memory, psychomotor speed, and certain aspects of frontal executive function. All BP-II patients were in an inter-episode period (a period of remission between states of mania, hypomania, and depression).
Results: BP(+AD) patients had lower scores than did BP(-AD) patients and controls in verbal memory, visual memory, attention, psychomotor speed, and executive function. Working memory was poorer for BP(+AD) than BP(-AD) patients and for both BP groups than for controls.
Conclusions: BP(+AD) patients manifested wide neuropsychological dysfunctions, and BP(-AD) patients showed a reduction in working memory, which suggested that working memory might be related to a history of BP-II. Neuropsychological dysfunctions seemed more strongly associated with AB/AD than with BP-II in inter-episode periods.
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