Abstract

BackgroundResearch on theory of mind (ToM) abilities in patients with bipolar disorder has yielded conflicting results. Meta-analyses point to a stable moderate impairment in remitted patients, but factors such as subsyndromal symptoms, illness severity, and deficits in basic neurocognitive functions might act as confounders. Also, differences in deficits depending on task area (cognitive or affective) or task modality (visual or verbal) have been observed. This study aimed to test the hypothesis that euthymic bipolar patients would perform more poorly than healthy subjects on visual cognitive and visual affective ToM tasks. Furthermore, we aimed to explore the relationship between ToM performance and basic neurocognitive functions, subsyndromal symptom severity, and illness burden. Twenty-nine clinically stable outpatients with bipolar disorder and 29 healthy comparison subjects completed a measure of visual cognitive ToM (Mental State Attribution Task, MSAT), a measure of visual affective ToM (Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test, RMET), and a battery of tests assessing neurocognitive functioning (attention, verbal memory, executive functions, and intelligence).ResultsPatients did not differ significantly from healthy controls for the ToM tasks or any of the neurocognitive measures, suggesting a high level of neurocognitive functioning in the bipolar group. On average, patients were slower than controls to complete the ToM tasks. Within the bipolar group, ToM performance was moderately correlated with attention, verbal memory and reasoning abilities. Performance on the RMET was positively correlated with clinician-rated depressive symptoms with a small effect. Number of years of illness was weakly and negatively correlated with performance on the MSAT. Overall, no moderate or strong correlations were found between ToM performance, subsyndromal depressive or manic symptoms, illness duration, and number of depressive or (hypo)manic episodes. Moderate correlations between ToM performance and age were found for patients but nor for controls.ConclusionsOur findings suggest preserved visual cognitive and affective ToM abilities in euthymic bipolar patients characterized by a high level of neurocognitive functioning.

Highlights

  • Research on theory of mind (ToM) abilities in patients with bipolar disorder has yielded conflicting results

  • Patients had to be euthymic for a minimum of 6 weeks prior to testing as determined by a score ≤9 on the 21-items-version of the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAMD; Hamilton 1960) and a score ≤12 on the Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS; Young et al 1978)

  • A total of five patients were excluded from analysis post hoc: Four patients revealed to meet exclusion criteria, while one patient refused to participate in the cognitive ToM task and was excluded due to missing data

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Summary

Introduction

Research on theory of mind (ToM) abilities in patients with bipolar disorder has yielded conflicting results. Tasks that demand of subjects to infer the feelings or affective mental states of others are regarded as measures to assess affective ToM and mental state decoding abilities if visual information such as facial expressions needs to be decoded. These dual-process schemes are supported by evidence from imaging studies that have reported taskspecific differences in brain activation patterns (Kalbe et al 2010; Schurz et al 2014; Shamay-Tsoory and Aharon-Peretz 2007)

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