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Perceived cognitive loss, symptomology, and psychological well-being with bipolar disorder. | LitMetric

Perceived cognitive loss, symptomology, and psychological well-being with bipolar disorder.

Int J Bipolar Disord

Department of Psychology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Be'er Sheva, Israel.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Identified four distinct clusters of adults with bipolar disorder (BD) based on BD symptoms and perceived cognitive errors, with a hypothesis suggesting that more symptoms and cognitive errors correlate with lower psychological well-being.
  • - The study involved 281 adults aged 19-81, revealing that those with more cognitive failures reported higher levels of both depression and hypo/mania symptoms, leading to lower self-efficacy and life satisfaction.
  • - Contrary to previous research, age differences in cognitive loss were not significant across the clusters, indicating that perceived cognitive errors negatively impact psychological well-being regardless of the participant's age.

Article Abstract

Background: Adults with bipolar disorder (BD) commonly present with cognitive deficits. Many also report subjective or perceived cognitive failures. For this study, we identified four distinct clusters of adults with BD on the basis of both BD symptoms (depression and hypo/mania) and perceived cognitive errors (i.e., forgetfulness, distractibility, false triggering). We hypothesized that participants reporting more BD symptoms and cognitive errors would report lower psychological well-being (i.e., self-efficacy, life scheme, life satisfaction). A second objective was to determine if and how clusters differed in terms of BD related factors (e.g., subtypes, sleep, medications) and sociodemographic differences such as age of participants. From the BADAS (Bipolar Affective Disorder and older Adults) Study, we identified 281adults with BD (M = 44.27 years of age, range 19-81), recruited via social media.

Results: All clusters significantly differed across all grouping variables except symptoms of hypo/mania due to low frequency. Across clusters, perceived cognitive failures and BD symptoms increased in lockstep; that is, those reporting more cognitive errors also reported significantly higher symptoms of both depression and hypo/mania. As hypothesized, they also reported significantly lower psychological well-being.

Conclusions: Age did not significantly differ across clusters in contrast to existing research in which cognitive loss is objectively measured. That is, perceived cognitive errors are significantly associated with lower psychological well-being for both young and older adults with BD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11456122PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40345-024-00357-4DOI Listing

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