TY - JOUR
T1 - Insight, global neuropsychological functioning, and symptomatology in chronic schizophrenia
AU - McCabe, Rosemarie
AU - Quayle, Ethel
AU - Beirne, Anthony D.
AU - Duane, Margaret M. Anne
PY - 2002/8
Y1 - 2002/8
N2 - It is proposed that poor insight in schizophrenia may be explained by neuropsychological dysfunction and linked to the negative syndrome, which in turn may be related to structural neurological impairment. This study tested the hypothesis that poor insight is related to global neuropsychological impairment and negative symptoms in 89 patients with chronic schizophrenia. No significant association was found between total insight and cognitive impairment. When the dimensions of insight-treatment compliance, awareness of illness, and symptom attribution-were analyzed separately, symptom misattribution was modestly correlated with frontal impairment. However, in subsequent multiple regression analyses, cognitive impairment failed to be a significant predictor of this or any other dimension of insight. Symptoms, particularly positive ones, accounted for approximately one quarter of the variance in symptom misattribution and the total insight score. These results suggest that neuropsychological functioning cannot account for the variance in insight, and that only one quarter of the variance in symptom misattribution can be explained by symptomatology. Future research could also address the role of psychosocial factors in modulating the expression of insight.
AB - It is proposed that poor insight in schizophrenia may be explained by neuropsychological dysfunction and linked to the negative syndrome, which in turn may be related to structural neurological impairment. This study tested the hypothesis that poor insight is related to global neuropsychological impairment and negative symptoms in 89 patients with chronic schizophrenia. No significant association was found between total insight and cognitive impairment. When the dimensions of insight-treatment compliance, awareness of illness, and symptom attribution-were analyzed separately, symptom misattribution was modestly correlated with frontal impairment. However, in subsequent multiple regression analyses, cognitive impairment failed to be a significant predictor of this or any other dimension of insight. Symptoms, particularly positive ones, accounted for approximately one quarter of the variance in symptom misattribution and the total insight score. These results suggest that neuropsychological functioning cannot account for the variance in insight, and that only one quarter of the variance in symptom misattribution can be explained by symptomatology. Future research could also address the role of psychosocial factors in modulating the expression of insight.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0036692593&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1097/00005053-200208000-00004
DO - 10.1097/00005053-200208000-00004
M3 - Article
C2 - 12193836
AN - SCOPUS:0036692593
SN - 0022-3018
VL - 190
SP - 519
EP - 525
JO - Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease
JF - Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease
IS - 8
ER -