Biblioteca Hospital 12 de Octubre
Rodríguez Jiménez, Roberto Dompablo Tobar, Mónica Bagney Lifante, Alexandra Torio, Iosune Moreno Ortega, Marta Jiménez Arriero, Miguel Ángel Palomo Álvarez, Tomás (1989-2010)

The MCCB impairment profile in a Spanish sample of patients with schizophrenia: Effects of diagnosis, age, and gender on cognitive functioning. [artículo] - Schizophrenia research, 2015 - 169(1-3):116-120.

Formato Vancouver:
Rodríguez Jiménez R, Dompablo M, Bagney A, Santabárbara J, Aparicio AI, Torio I et al. The MCCB impairment profile in a Spanish sample of patients with schizophrenia: Effects of diagnosis, age, and gender on cognitive functioning. Schizophr Res. 2015 Dec;169(1-3):116-120.

PMID: 26416441

Contiene 29 referencias

The MATRICS Consensus Cognitive Battery (MCCB) was administered to 293 schizophrenia outpatients and 210 community residents in Spain. Our first objective was to identify the age- and gender-corrected MCCB cognitive profile of patients with schizophrenia. The profile of schizophrenia patients showed deficits when compared to controls across the seven MCCB domains. Reasoning and Problem Solving and Social Cognition were the least impaired, while Visual Learning and Verbal Learning showed the greatest deficits. Our second objective was to study the effects on cognitive functioning of age and gender, in addition to diagnosis. Diagnosis was found to have the greatest effect on cognition (Cohen's d>0.8 for all MCCB domains); age and gender also had effects on cognitive functioning, although to a lesser degree (with age usually having slightly larger effects than gender). The effects of age were apparent in all domains (with better performance in younger subjects), except for Social Cognition. Gender had effects on Attention/Vigilance, Working Memory, Reasoning and Problem Solving (better performance in males), and Social Cognition (better performance in females). No interaction effects were found between diagnosis and age, or between diagnosis and gender. This lack of interactions suggests that age and gender effects are not different in patients and controls.

Con tecnología Koha