From the Journals

Reappraisal in emotion regulation unrelated to working memory in bipolar disorder


 

FROM THE JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS

Working memory may not function properly during the reappraisal process of emotion regulation in patients with bipolar disorder, according to Dong Hun Oh of the department of psychiatry at Yonsei University, Seoul, South Korea, and associates.

For the study, published in the Journal of Affective Disorders, 43 patients with euthymic bipolar I disorder were recruited from a psychiatric outpatient clinic in Seoul and compared with 48 healthy controls. The Korean versions of the operation span task (OSPAN), emotion regulation questionnaire (K-ERQ), ruminative response scale (K-RRS), and Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (K-DERS) were administered to all the patients.

In a between-group comparison of scores on the four scales measured, patients with bipolar disorder had significantly lower scores on OSPAN (P = .031), on the brooding section of the K-RRS (P =.016), and on the nonacceptance section of the K-DERS (P = .039). In a regression analysis of the interaction between working memory and the four components of emotion regulation (reappraisal, expressive suppression, brooding, and reflective pondering), a significant interaction was found in OSPAN scores for reappraisal between healthy controls and the BD group (P = .007). Brooding scores were significantly lower in the control group, but the interaction was not significant.

A simple slope analysis showed that, while working memory was worse in patients with bipolar disorder, a relationship between cognitive capacity and the efficacy of reappraisal was found only in healthy controls, the investigators noted.

“The absence of interaction between [working memory capacity] and reappraisal in euthymic [bipolar disorder] patients that we report may indicate that the positive effects of cognitive remediation or [working memory] training previously reported for healthy people, may not effectively improve [emotion regulation] for patients with [bipolar disorder],” they wrote.

This could mean that “top-down regulation of emotion is impaired” in patients with bipolar disorder. Furthermore, if this is the case, cognitive interventions aimed at improving emotion regulation in patients with bipolar disorder might not work.

The investigators cited several limitations. One limitation was the small sample size; another was the use of self-administered questionnaires.

The study was supported by a faculty research grant from Yonsei University. The authors did not report any conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Oh DH et al. J Affect Disord. 2019 Apr 8. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2019.04.042.

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