2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2021.06.022
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Sleep quality and neuropsychological functioning in bipolar I disorder

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Cited by 7 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…The inverse association of mentally active sedentary behavior, a type of intellectual stimulation, and cognition in later-life participants is also in line with our earlier UK Biobank study in which we found that BD and control participants with less mentally active sedentary behavior were less protected against putative cognitive decline (Ringin et al, 2023). Regarding sleep, preliminary BD research has linked sleep abnormalities with attention and processing speed impairments, although none have examined this association as a function of age (Bradley et al, 2020;Burgess et al, 2022;Kanady, Soehner, Klein, & Harvey, 2017;Laskemoen et al, 2020;Menkes et al, 2021;Russo et al, 2015). Nonetheless, meta-analytic data from the general population has shown a negative association of short and long sleep duration with multi-domain cognitive performance, executive functions, verbal, and working memory during later-life (Lo, Groeger, Cheng, Dijk, & Chee, 2016).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…The inverse association of mentally active sedentary behavior, a type of intellectual stimulation, and cognition in later-life participants is also in line with our earlier UK Biobank study in which we found that BD and control participants with less mentally active sedentary behavior were less protected against putative cognitive decline (Ringin et al, 2023). Regarding sleep, preliminary BD research has linked sleep abnormalities with attention and processing speed impairments, although none have examined this association as a function of age (Bradley et al, 2020;Burgess et al, 2022;Kanady, Soehner, Klein, & Harvey, 2017;Laskemoen et al, 2020;Menkes et al, 2021;Russo et al, 2015). Nonetheless, meta-analytic data from the general population has shown a negative association of short and long sleep duration with multi-domain cognitive performance, executive functions, verbal, and working memory during later-life (Lo, Groeger, Cheng, Dijk, & Chee, 2016).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…Regarding sleep, preliminary BD research has linked sleep abnormalities with cognitive impairment, although none have examined this association as a function of age (Bradley et al, 2020;Burgess et al, 2022;Kanady, Soehner, Klein, & Harvey, 2017;Laskemoen et al, 2020;Menkes et al, 2021;Russo et al, 2015). Nonetheless, meta-analytic data from the general population has shown an negative association of short and long sleep duration with cognition during later-life (Lo, Groeger, Cheng, Dijk, & Chee, 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Circadian clock-deficient cryptochrome knockout mice present with cognitive dysfunction and elevated anxiety [ 66 ]. Poor sleep quality is found related to poorer neuropsychological functioning in bipolar I disorder [ 67 ]. With RDoC highlighting circadian rhythm and cognitive evaluation in arousal/modulatory system and cognitive system separately, we can’t help speculating the role of circadian rhythm in neurocognitive impairment of BD, where we seek to better understand the correlation of circadian rhythm and neurocognitive functioning [ 11 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%