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Colour vision impairments in bipolar disorder: a systematic review

Colour vision impairments in bipolar disorder: a systematic review
Colour vision impairments in bipolar disorder: a systematic review
Visual impairments are common in patients with bipolar disorder (BD), and the neuropathophysiology may suggest a potential influence on colour vision. This systematic review aimed to assess existing data of colour vision impairment, including chromatic discrimination and colour blindness in patients with BD. Comprehensive literature search compliant with PRISMA 2020 was conducted in Medline, Embase, and Google Scholar from inception to February 28th, 2023. Our inclusion criteria were: (1) patients with a diagnosis of bipolar I or II disorder based on DSM, ICD, or clinical diagnosis, and (2) study investigating colour vision (i.e., including colour blindness and discrimination), with (3) no restrictions on the condition of the comparator group. Study quality appraisal was performed using the NIH Study Quality Assessment Tool. Five studies from Brazil, Netherlands, and USA, with 338 patients were included. Three cross-sectional studies assessed chromatic discrimination and two case-series assessed colour blindness in patients with BD. The three cross-sectional studies support reduced chromatic discrimination during mild to moderate mania in BD when compared to healthy comparators. The latter two articles presented low evidence of an X-linked inheritance of BD. Our review indicates evidence of reduced chromatic discrimination in mild to moderate mania. However, further research is needed to validate these findings and to extend to other mood states in BD given current limitations. Future studies can benefit from further multi-institutional data, larger sample sizes, appropriate blinding, the use of biomarkers, and statistical adjustment to confounders to fully elucidate the role of chromatic discrimination in BD.
Bipolar disorder, Chromatic discrimination, Color blindness, Colour vision, Mania, Vision changes
2772-4085
Tran, Jason
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Gupta, Arnav
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Fabiano, Nicholas
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Dhir, Vinita
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Larose, Katherine
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Lasker, Iris
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Wong, Stanley
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Mohammad, Ibrahim Y.Z.
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Le, Steven
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Fiedorowicz, Jess G.
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Shorr, Risa
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Zampieri, Andrea
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Bellato, Alessio
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Cortese, Samuele
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Solmi, Marco
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Tran, Jason
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Gupta, Arnav
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Fabiano, Nicholas
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Dhir, Vinita
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Larose, Katherine
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Lasker, Iris
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Wong, Stanley
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Mohammad, Ibrahim Y.Z.
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Le, Steven
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Fiedorowicz, Jess G.
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Shorr, Risa
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Zampieri, Andrea
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Bellato, Alessio
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Cortese, Samuele
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Solmi, Marco
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Tran, Jason, Gupta, Arnav, Fabiano, Nicholas, Dhir, Vinita, Larose, Katherine, Lasker, Iris, Wong, Stanley, Mohammad, Ibrahim Y.Z., Le, Steven, Fiedorowicz, Jess G., Shorr, Risa, Zampieri, Andrea, Bellato, Alessio, Cortese, Samuele and Solmi, Marco (2024) Colour vision impairments in bipolar disorder: a systematic review. Neuroscience Applied, 3, [104057]. (doi:10.1016/j.nsa.2024.104057).

Record type: Review

Abstract

Visual impairments are common in patients with bipolar disorder (BD), and the neuropathophysiology may suggest a potential influence on colour vision. This systematic review aimed to assess existing data of colour vision impairment, including chromatic discrimination and colour blindness in patients with BD. Comprehensive literature search compliant with PRISMA 2020 was conducted in Medline, Embase, and Google Scholar from inception to February 28th, 2023. Our inclusion criteria were: (1) patients with a diagnosis of bipolar I or II disorder based on DSM, ICD, or clinical diagnosis, and (2) study investigating colour vision (i.e., including colour blindness and discrimination), with (3) no restrictions on the condition of the comparator group. Study quality appraisal was performed using the NIH Study Quality Assessment Tool. Five studies from Brazil, Netherlands, and USA, with 338 patients were included. Three cross-sectional studies assessed chromatic discrimination and two case-series assessed colour blindness in patients with BD. The three cross-sectional studies support reduced chromatic discrimination during mild to moderate mania in BD when compared to healthy comparators. The latter two articles presented low evidence of an X-linked inheritance of BD. Our review indicates evidence of reduced chromatic discrimination in mild to moderate mania. However, further research is needed to validate these findings and to extend to other mood states in BD given current limitations. Future studies can benefit from further multi-institutional data, larger sample sizes, appropriate blinding, the use of biomarkers, and statistical adjustment to confounders to fully elucidate the role of chromatic discrimination in BD.

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Accepted/In Press date: 11 March 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 March 2024
Published date: 15 March 2024
Keywords: Bipolar disorder, Chromatic discrimination, Color blindness, Colour vision, Mania, Vision changes

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488357
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488357
ISSN: 2772-4085
PURE UUID: 856c5c6f-65e6-4cbe-8a1d-547a6e44de33
ORCID for Alessio Bellato: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5330-6773
ORCID for Samuele Cortese: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5877-8075

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 21 Mar 2024 17:30
Last modified: 03 Dec 2024 03:08

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Contributors

Author: Jason Tran
Author: Arnav Gupta
Author: Nicholas Fabiano
Author: Vinita Dhir
Author: Katherine Larose
Author: Iris Lasker
Author: Stanley Wong
Author: Ibrahim Y.Z. Mohammad
Author: Steven Le
Author: Jess G. Fiedorowicz
Author: Risa Shorr
Author: Andrea Zampieri
Author: Alessio Bellato ORCID iD
Author: Samuele Cortese ORCID iD
Author: Marco Solmi

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