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Journal Article

Citation

Dudek D, Siwek M, Jaeschke R, Drozdowicz K, Styczen K, Arciszewska A, Chrobak AA, Rybakowski JK. Acta Neuropsyciatr. 2015; 28(3): 179-183.

Affiliation

3Department of Adult Psychiatry,Poznan University of Medical Sciences,Poznan,Poland.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Cambridge University Press)

DOI

10.1017/neu.2015.44

PMID

26189574

Abstract

BACKGROUND: We hypothesised that men and women who engage in extreme or high-risk sports would score higher on standardised measures of bipolarity and impulsivity compared to age and gender matched controls.

METHODS: Four-hundred and eighty extreme or high-risk athletes (255 males and 225 females) and 235 age-matched control persons (107 males and 128 females) were enrolled into the web-based case-control study. The Mood Disorder Questionnaire (MDQ) and Barratt Impulsiveness Scale (BIS-11) were administered to screen for bipolarity and impulsive behaviours, respectively.

RESULTS: Results indicated that extreme or high-risk athletes had significantly higher scores of bipolarity and impulsivity, and lower scores on cognitive complexity of the BIS-11, compared to controls. Further, there were positive correlations between the MDQ and BIS-11 scores.

CONCLUSION: These results showed greater rates of bipolarity and impulsivity, in the extreme or high-risk athletes, suggesting these measures are sensitive to high-risk behaviours.


Language: en

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