Background: Several studies using event-related potential (ERP) methods have reported a relationship between the cognitive dysfunction of patients with psychosis and P300 latency and amplitude. P300 follow-up studies in patients with schizophrenia receiving antipsychotic treatment revealed that the P300 amplitudes were increased while other studies showed limited changes in the P300 amplitude even after antipsychotics use. Results: We found that at the first presentation, all patients’ groups have significantly lower amplitude and more prolonged latency of P300 than controls. All the first-episode psychosis patients showed a significant improvement of P300 amplitude mean scores after 1 year, but with no significant change in the P300 latency. There was an inverse correlation between the patients’ PANSS scores and their P300 latency and amplitude values. Conclusion: P300 amplitude and latency might be of clinical value in the evaluation of cognitive functions in the first-episode psychosis patients. The abnormalities in P300 may be improved with continuous control of psychotic symptoms with psychotropic medications.
CITATION STYLE
Hassan, W. A., Darweesh, A. E. M., Abdel-Rahman, A. A., Ahmad, H. E. K., Hassaan, S. H., Noaman, M. M., & Fahmy, I. F. G. (2020). P300 cognitive assessment in patients with first-episode psychosis: a prospective case-control study. Middle East Current Psychiatry, 27(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s43045-020-00031-2
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