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- Title
Attention, memory, visuoconstructive, and executive task performance in adolescents with anxiety disorders: a case-control community study.
- Authors
Jarros, Rafaela Behs; Salum, Giovanni Abrahão; da Silva, Cristiano Tschiedel Belem; Toazza, Rudineia; Becker, Natália; Agranonik, Marilyn; de Salles, Jerusa Fumagalli; Manfro, Gisele Gus
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of the present study was to assess children and adolescents with mild and severe anxiety disorders for their performance in attention, verbal episodic memory, working memory, visuoconstructive skills, executive functions, and cognitive global functioning and conduct comparative analyses with the performance of children free from anxiety disorders. Methods: Our sample comprised 68 children and adolescents aged 10 to 17 years (41 with current diagnoses of anxiety disorders and 27 controls) selected from a larger cross-sectional community sample of adolescents. Children and adolescents with anxiety disorders were categorized into two groups on the basis of anxiety severity (mild or severe). All participants underwent a neuropsychological assessment battery to evaluate attention, verbal episodic memory, working memory, visuoconstructive skills, and executive and cognitive functions. Results: No differences were found in any neuropsychological tests, with the single exception that the group with mild anxiety had better performance on the Digit Span backward test compared to subjects with severe anxiety and to controls (p = 0.041; η2 = 0.11). Conclusions: Not only might anxiety disorders spare main cognitive functions during adolescence, they may even enhance certain working memory processes.
- Subjects
ANXIETY disorders; ANXIETY disorders treatment; ATTENTION; EPISODIC memory; TASK performance; DIAGNOSIS
- Publication
Trends in Psychiatry & Psychotherapy, 2017, Vol 39, Issue 1, p5
- ISSN
2237-6089
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1590/2237-6089-2016-0032