Are neuropsychological deficits trait markers in OCD?
OBJECTIVE: Neuropsychological deficits are potential endophenotype markers. In obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), there is impairment in executive functions and nonverbal memory. However, studies have largely examined neuropsychological functioning in patients during the symptomatic phase. The state independent nature of neuropsychological deficits in OCD is not established. For neuropsychological deficits to be endophenotype markers, they have to be state-independent. We compared neuropsychological functions in recovered OCD patients with matched healthy controls. METHOD: We assessed 30 recovered DSM-IV OCD patients without any concurrent comorbidity or lifetime history of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, tics and alcohol/substance abuse and 30 healthy controls individually matched for age, sex and education. They were assessed on different neuropsychological dimensions: attention, executive function, memory and intelligence. For between-group comparisons, we employed univariate ana