Evaluation of Neurocognitive Functions of Children and Adolescents Diagnosed with Pediatric Bipolar Disorder and Disruptive Mood Dysregulation and at High Risk for Bipolar Disorder
I. Yenen Sivri, E. Çöp, K. C. Can, A. S. Yenen Menderes

TL;DR
This study compares neurocognitive and behavioral differences in children with bipolar disorder, disruptive mood dysregulation disorder, and those at high genetic risk for bipolar disorder, compared to healthy controls.
Contribution
The study identifies distinct neurocognitive deficits in BPD and DMDD groups and provides insights into potential endophenotypes for bipolar disorder.
Findings
Children with BPD and DMDD showed significant impairments in continuous attention, processing speed, and working memory compared to healthy controls.
The high-risk group exhibited deficits in continuous attention, suggesting potential early markers for bipolar disorder.
Behavioral and clinical problems were more prevalent in BPD, DMDD, and high-risk groups compared to healthy controls.
Abstract
Pediatric Bipolar Disorder (BPD) is a chronic psychiatric disorder that alters normal and psychological development processes among patients. Although cognitive deficits in BPD have identified in recent studies, little is known about the developmental trajectory of these deficits. DMDD is a newly defined diagnosis included in the DSM-V. Since it added a new dimension to the clinical spectrum but few studies conducted on DMDD, there are some conflicting discussions in the literature about how to distinguish this disorder from other childhood psychiatric disorders and how to treat it. The aim of this study was to determine the phenomenological and neuropsychological differences between children and adolescents with a diagnosis of BPD (Pediatric Bipolar Disorder), DMDD (Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder), and children and adolescents who are genetically at high risk for Bipolar…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBipolar Disorder and Treatment
