Cognitive Functioning in Bipolar Patients Receiving Lamotrigine
Article 2006 en
Authors
CD
Claire Daban
AM
Anabel Martínez‐Arán
CT
Carla Torrent
Abstract
1 min read
Despite the increasing use of lamotrigine (LTG) in bipolar disorder, little is known about its impact on cognition in bipolar patients. Therefore, we have evaluated 33 bipolar I and II patients on cognitive measures (verbal memory, attention, executive functions) while receiving either LTG (n = 15) or another anticonvulsant (carbamazepine or valproate; n = 18). Patients receiving LTG were generally diagnosed as having bipolar II disorder, had experienced more depressive episodes but a lesser number of hospitalizations, and had better performance than the patients receiving carbamazepine or valproate on the verbal fluency task. A moderate effect size also suggests that both groups may differ on the immediate verbal memory test (California Verbal Learning Test). These preliminary results suggest a safer neurocognitive profile of LTG on bipolar patients, as compared with other anticonvulsants.
Eduard Vieta, María Reinares, Bàrbara Corbella, Antoni Benabarre, Inmaculada Gilaberte, Francesc Colom, Anabel Martínez‐Arán, Cristòbal Gastó, M. Tohen
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