Males and females with first episode psychosis present distinct profiles of social cognition and metacognition
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hdl:2117/371556
Tipus de documentArticle
Data publicació2022-07-08
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Reconeixement 4.0 Internacional
Abstract
Deficits in social cognition and metacognition impact the course of psychosis. Sex differences in social cognition and metacognition could explain heterogeneity in psychosis. 174 (58 females) patients with first-episode psychosis completed a clinical, neuropsychological, social cognitive, and metacognitive assessment. Subsequent latent profile analysis split by sex yielded two clusters common to both sexes (a Homogeneous group, 53% and 79.3%, and an Indecisive group, 18.3% and 8.6% of males and females, respectively), a specific male profile characterized by presenting jumping to conclusions (28.7%) and a specific female profile characterized by cognitive biases (12.1%). Males and females in the homogeneous profile seem to have a more benign course of illness. Males with jumping to conclusions had more clinical symptoms and more neuropsychological deficits. Females with cognitive biases were younger and had lower self-esteem. These results suggest that males and females may benefit from specific targeted treatment and highlights the need to consider sex when planning interventions
CitacióFerrer-Quintero, M.; Fernandez, D.; López, R. Males and females with first episode psychosis present distinct profiles of social cognition and metacognition. "European archives of psychiatry and clinical neuroscience", 8 Juliol 2022, p. 1-13.
ISSN0940-1334
Versió de l'editorhttps://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00406-022-01438-0
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Ferrer-Quintero ... FemalesWithFirstEpisod.pdf | Open access | 943,9Kb | Visualitza/Obre |