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The association between childhood traumas, cognitive functioning and cerebral morphology in patients with type I bipolar disorder

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Author(s):
Danielle Soares Bio
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Doctoral Thesis
Press: São Paulo.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Faculdade de Medicina (FM/SBD)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Ricardo Alberto Moreno; Pedro Mario Pan Neto; Cristiana Castanho de Almeida Rocca; Sandra Scivoletto
Advisor: Ricardo Alberto Moreno; Márcio Gerhardt Soeiro de Souza
Abstract

Introduction: Bipolar disorder (BD) is a chronic, cyclically-evolving problem that is highly prevalent in the general population and is associated with significant disability of the patients and cognitive and functional deficits, thus constituting an important public health problem. The etiology of BD seems to be multifactorial, resulting from the interaction between genetic and environmental factors, and studies show that the predisposition to the manifestation of episodes of BD may result from exposure to childhood maltreatment (CM), which compromises the emotional, cerebral and cognitive development and seems to be present in between 30 and 60% of BD patients. In BD, CM have been associated with earlier onset age, worse clinical course, higher incidence of comorbidities and, although the literature is scarce and not conclusive, it has also been associated with changes in cognitive function and brain morphology. Objective: To investigate whether the cognitive profile and the brain morphometry of patients with euthymic BD differ between those exposed or non-exposed to CM. Method: 75 euthymic BD patients, aged between 18 and 45 years, attended at the ambulatory of the Affective Disorders Program (GRUDA) IPq-HC-FMUSP, 32 of which had no history of CM and 43 with a positive history of CM according to the cut-off of the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ) and 46 physically and mentally healthy volunteers, aged 18-45 years, with no history of CM according to the CTQ and no first-degree relatives with psychiatric disorders were submitted to a battery of neuropsychological tests that evaluated attentional, mnemonic, executive, and social cognition functions and a study of magnetic resonance imaging. Results: The results point to a difference in cognitive performance between groups in one of the measures of mental flexibility (p = 0.04), in one of matrix reasoning (p = 0.035) and in the ability to recognize facial emotions of sadness FER, p = 0.022). Regarding cerebral morphometry, it can be observed that the volume of the Caudate Nucleus showed a statistically significant difference between the three groups, both in the right hemisphere (p = 0.002) and in the left hemisphere (0.008). In the left hemisphere, the area of Medial Orbital Frontal (p = 0.0466), the area of Precuneus (p = 0.0193) and the area of Superior Parietal (p = 0.0063) presented statistically significant differences. In the right temisphere, the area of Medial Orbital Frontal (p = 0.0200), the area of Precuneus (p = 0.0337), the area of Superior Parietal (p = 0.0007), the thickness of Pars Triangularis (p = 0.0013), the thickness of Precentral (p = 0.0307) and the thickness of Superior Frontal (p = 0.0425) presented statistically significant differences. Finally, from this exploratory analysis, it is possible to observe that in the group of BD with CM the results point to possible associations between brain regions and cognitive performance, specifically: Right Hippocampus Volume and TMT-B (pinteraction = 0,002, r = -0,40, pr=0,013), Right Superior Frontal Area and SCWT-I (pinteraction = 0.0008, r = -0.36, pr = 0.0185), Left Medial Orbital Frontal area and FCR-copy (pinteraction= 0,004, r = 0,49, pr=0,014), Right Medial Orbital Frontal Thickness and COWAT-total (pinteraction = 0.004, r = 0.46, pr= 0.003), Left Rostral Medial Frontal Thickness and WCST-errors (pinteraction = 0.007, r = -0.42, pr = 0.007). Conclusions: Despite the limitation of the sample size and the number of statistical comparisons performed, this is the first study to evaluate the association between CM, cognitive functioning and brain morphometry. The results are suggestive of the magnitude of the correlations between the characteristics morphometric and cognitive variables can be modulated by exposure to CM and by case status (BD patients) (AU)

FAPESP's process: 14/03233-9 - The association between childhood trauma, cognitive functioning and brain morphology in patients with bipolar disorder type I
Grantee:Danielle Soares Bio
Support Opportunities: Scholarships in Brazil - Doctorate