Abstract

Estimating premorbid intelligence in schizophrenia is difficult because the illness affects aspects of premorbid and postmorbid functioning. We evaluated two qualitatively different estimates of premorbid intelligence in a sample of schizophrenia patients and tested whether: (1) the two indices were related and produced similar IQ estimates, and (2) either index was related to a measure of cognitive deterioration. The Barona Index (BI, a demographically-based instrument) and the National Adult Reading Test (NART, a reading test of irregularly-spelled words) were utilized. Subjects ( n=40) were adult neuroleptic-medicated inpatients with a DSM-III-R diagnosis of chronic schizophrenia ( n=35) or schizoaffective disorder ( n=5). Paired t-tests revealed statistically equivalent BI and NART estimates for Full Scale and Verbal IQs, but significantly higher NART Performance IQs (ift[35] = −3.34, p > 0.01). Correlational analyses suggested the two indices were associated but shared modest variance. BI correlations revealed expected associations with education and social position. NART IQs were related to education and a measure of cognitive status. Regression analyses supported the association between NART estimates and cognitive deterioration. Results suggest BI may be a better estimate of premorbid intelligence in schizophrenia as it is less influenced by potential

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