collection
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25893553/an-empirical-test-of-rejection-and-anger-related-interpretation-bias-in-borderline-personality-disorder
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jill Lobbestael, Richard J McNally
The authors tested whether borderline personality disorder (BPD) is characterized by interpretation bias for disambiguating stimuli in favor of threatening interpretations, especially concerning abuse, abandonment, rejection, and anger-core emotional triggers for BPD patients. A mixed sample of 106 patients with marked BPD traits and nonpatients were assessed with SCID I and II and were presented with vignettes depicting ambiguous social interactions. Interpretations of these vignettes were assessed both in a closed and an open answer format...
June 2016: Journal of Personality Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25905734/the-specific-role-of-childhood-abuse-parental-bonding-and-family-functioning-in-female-adolescents-with-borderline-personality-disorder
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maria Rita Infurna, Romuald Brunner, Birger Holz, Peter Parzer, Francesca Giannone, Corinna Reichl, Gloria Fischer, Franz Resch, Michael Kaess
This study examined a broad variety of adverse childhood experiences in a consecutive sample of female adolescent inpatients with borderline personality disorder (BPD; n = 44) compared with a clinical control (CC; n = 47) group with mixed psychiatric diagnoses. BPD was diagnosed using a structured clinical interview; different dimensions of childhood adversity were assessed using the Childhood Experiences of Care and Abuse Questionnaire, the Parental Bonding Instrument, and the Family Assessment Device. A history of childhood adversity was significantly more common in patients with BPD than in the CC group...
April 2016: Journal of Personality Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25908497/oxytocin-conditions-intergroup-relations-through-upregulated-in-group-empathy-cooperation-conformity-and-defense
#23
REVIEW
Carsten K W De Dreu, Mariska E Kret
Humans live in, rely on, and contribute to groups. Evolution may have biologically prepared them to quickly identify others as belonging to the in-group (vs. not), to decode emotional states, and to empathize with in-group members; to learn and conform to group norms and cultural practices; to extend and reciprocate trust and cooperation; and to aggressively protect the in-group against outside threat. We review evidence that these components of human group psychology rest on and are modulated by the hypothalamic neuropeptide oxytocin...
February 1, 2016: Biological Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25915162/new-frontiers-in-selective-human-mao-b-inhibitors
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Simone Carradori, Romano Silvestri
Accumulating evidence shows a relationship between the human MAO-B (hMAO-B) enzyme and neuropsychiatric/degenerative disorder, personality traits, type II alcoholism, borderline personality disorders, aggressiveness and violence in crime, obsessive-compulsive disorder, depression, suicide, schizophrenia, anorexia nervosa, migraine, dementia, and PD. Thus, MAO-B represents an attractive target for the treatment of a number of human diseases. The discovery, development, and therapeutic use of drugs that inhibit MAO-B are major challenges for future therapy...
September 10, 2015: Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25919848/management-and-effectiveness-of-psychopharmacology-in-emotionally-unstable-and-borderline-personality-disorder
#25
COMMENT
Kenneth R Silk
The article by Paton and colleagues on the use of psychotropic medication in patients with emotionally unstable personality disorder (EUPD) in the current issue of JCP is an important article. Making the assumption that EUPD as defined by ICD-10 (F60.3) is reasonably equivalent to borderline personality disorder (BPD) as defined in the United States by DSM, we are provided some insight into how practitioners think about prescribing medications to people with EUPD/BPD. The article not only offers information as to the class of medication these practitioners are using but also provides reasons why, ie, for what clinical signs and symptoms, the medications are being prescribed...
April 2015: Journal of Clinical Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25925083/negative-emotional-reactivity-as-a-marker-of-vulnerability-in-the-development-of-borderline-personality-disorder-symptoms
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stephanie D Stepp, Lori N Scott, Neil P Jones, Diana J Whalen, Alison E Hipwell
Negative emotionality is a distinguishing feature of borderline personality disorder (BPD). However, this person-level characteristic has not been examined as a marker of vulnerability in the development of this disorder. The current study utilized a multimethod approach to examine the interplay between negative emotional reactivity and cumulative exposure to family adversity on the development of BPD symptoms across 3 years (ages 16-18) in a diverse, at-risk sample of adolescent girls (N = 113). A latent variable of negative emotional reactivity was created from multiple assessments at age 16: self-report, emotion ratings to stressors from ecological assessments across 1 week, and observer-rated negative affectivity during a mother-daughter conflict discussion task...
February 2016: Development and Psychopathology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25930735/increased-serum-prolactin-in-borderline-personality-disorder
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Murad Atmaca, Sevda Korkmaz, Bilal Ustundag, Yusuf Ozkan
Although there is an important interaction between serotonergic system, prolactin and suicidal behavior, and impulsivity, no investigation examined the prolactin values in borderline personality disorder in which suicidal behavior and impulsivity are core symptom dimensions. In this context, in the present investigation, we planned to measure serum prolactin levels in the patients with borderline personality disorder. The study comprised 15 patients with borderline personality disorder and 15 healthy controls...
2015: International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25935068/neural-correlates-of-disturbed-emotion-processing-in-borderline-personality-disorder-a-multimodal-meta-analysis
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lars Schulze, Christian Schmahl, Inga Niedtfeld
BACKGROUND: Disturbances in the processing and regulation of emotions are core symptoms of borderline personality disorder (BPD). To further elucidate neural underpinnings of BPD, the present meta-analysis summarizes functional neuroimaging findings of emotion processing tasks, as well as structural neuroimaging findings, and investigates multimodally affected brain regions. METHODS: Combined coordinate- and image-based meta-analyses were calculated using anisotropic effect size signed differential mapping...
January 15, 2016: Biological Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25937342/symptom-severity-and-disgust-related-traits-in-borderline-personality-disorder-the-role-of-amygdala-subdivisions
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anne Schienle, Verena Leutgeb, Albert Wabnegger
The majority of morphometric studies on borderline personality disorder (BPD) found that diagnosed patients have a reduced amygdala volume. We sought to extend this finding by focusing on amygdala subdivisions (centromedial, laterobasal, superficial) and their association with symptom severity and disgust-related traits. Additional disorder-/disgust-relevant regions (insula, somatosensory cortex) were also investigated. We compared structural imaging data from 25 female BPD patients and 25 healthy women via voxel-based morphometry...
June 30, 2015: Psychiatry Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25938535/a-3-year-longitudinal-study-of-risk-for-bipolar-spectrum-psychopathology
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Molly A Walsh, Daniella P DeGeorge, Neus Barrantes-Vidal, Thomas R Kwapil
Current clinical and epidemiological research provides support for a continuum of bipolar psychopathology: a bipolar spectrum that ranges from subthreshold characteristics to clinical disorders. The present research examined risk for bipolar spectrum psychopathology at a 3-year follow-up assessment in a nonclinically ascertained sample of 112 young adults identified by the Hypomanic Personality Scale (HPS). Participants completed diagnostic interviews assessing bipolar psychopathology, borderline personality traits, substance use disorders, impulsivity, and psychosocial functioning...
August 2015: Journal of Abnormal Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25940514/childhood-emotional-abuse-and-borderline-personality-features-the-role-of-anxiety-sensitivity-among-adolescents
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nadia Bounoua, Julia F Felton, Katie Long, Ryan D Stadnik, Jennifer M Loya, Laura MacPherson, Carl W Lejuez
Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a pervasive personality disorder that poses a burden for affected individuals, their family members and society as a whole. Current research suggests that early childhood abuse, including emotional abuse, may be an important predictor of later BPD symptomology. Further, an emerging body of literature suggests that anxiety sensitivity (AS) may serve as a form of emotional vulnerability and be a key variable in the relation between abuse and the development of BPD symptomatology...
May 2015: Personality and Mental Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25942040/childhood-trauma-midbrain-activation-and-psychotic-symptoms-in-borderline-personality-disorder
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
K Nicol, M Pope, L Romaniuk, J Hall
Childhood trauma is believed to contribute to the development of borderline personality disorder (BPD), however the mechanism by which childhood trauma increases risk for specific symptoms of the disorder is not well understood. Here, we explore the relationship between childhood trauma, brain activation in response to emotional stimuli and psychotic symptoms in BPD. Twenty individuals with a diagnosis of BPD and 16 healthy controls were recruited to undergo a functional MRI scan, during which they viewed images of faces expressing the emotion of fear...
May 5, 2015: Translational Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25940516/autobiographical-memory-in-borderline-personality-disorder-a-systematic-review
#33
REVIEW
Morten Bech, Ask Elklit, Erik Simonsen
Borderline personality disorder is a severe psychiatric illness. A key feature of the disorder is a disorganized sense of self often referred to as identity diffusion. Autobiographical memory is memory for personal life events. One of the main functions of these memories is to enable us to understand who we are by connecting past, present and future experiences. It seems that autobiographical memory is in some way disrupted in individuals with borderline personality disorder. A systematic review is conducted looking at studies that focus on the potential connections...
May 2015: Personality and Mental Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25946399/personality-disorders-in-euthymic-bipolar-patients-a-systematic-review
#34
REVIEW
Severino Bezerra-Filho, Amanda Galvão-de Almeida, Paula Studart, Marlos V Rocha, Frederico L Lopes, Ângela Miranda-Scippa
OBJECTIVE: To identify, by means of a systematic review, the frequency with which comorbid personality disorders (PDs) have been assessed in studies of euthymic bipolar patients. METHODS: PubMed, ciELO and PsychINFO databases were searched for eligible articles published between 1997 and 2013. After screening 1,249 empirical papers, two independent reviewers identified three articles evaluating the frequency of PDs in patients with bipolar disorders assessed in a state of euthymia...
April 2015: Revista Brasileira de Psiquiatria
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25959039/group-dialectical-behavior-therapy-skills-training-for-conversion-disorder-with-seizures
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kim D Bullock, Nida Mirza, Craig Forte, Mickey Trockel
Neuroimaging evidence suggests deficits in affective regulation in conversion disorder (CD). Dialectical-behavior therapy skills training (DBT-ST) was developed to target emotion dysregulation. This study was aimed to test the feasibility of stand-alone DBT-ST for CD using Linehan's manual for borderline personality disorder. In a prospective naturalistic design, 19 adult outpatients diagnosed with video EEG-confirmed seizure type CD were recruited and received weekly group DBT. Seventeen out of 19 subjects finished an average of 20...
2015: Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25961815/poor-self-control-and-harsh-punishment-in-childhood-prospectively-predict-borderline-personality-symptoms-in-adolescent-girls
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael N Hallquist, Alison E Hipwell, Stephanie D Stepp
Developmental theories of borderline personality disorder (BPD) propose that harsh, invalidating parenting of a child with poor self-control and heightened negative emotionality often leads to a coercive cycle of parent-child transactions that increase risk for BPD symptoms such as emotion dysregulation. Although parenting practices and child temperament have previously been linked with BPD, less is known about the prospective influences of caregiver and child characteristics. Using annual longitudinal data from the Pittsburgh Girls Study (n = 2,450), our study examined how reciprocal influences among harsh parenting, self-control, and negative emotionality between ages 5 and 14 predicted the development of BPD symptoms in adolescent girls ages 14 to 17...
August 2015: Journal of Abnormal Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25982488/affective-context-interferes-with-brain-responses-during-cognitive-processing-in-borderline-personality-disorder-fmri-evidence
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paul H Soloff, Richard White, Amro Omari, Karthik Ramaseshan, Vaibhav A Diwadkar
Emotion dysregulation in borderline personality disorder (BPD) is associated with loss of cognitive control in the face of intense negative emotion. Negative emotional context may interfere with cognitive processing through the dysmodulation of brain regions involved in regulation of emotion, impulse control, executive function and memory. Structural and metabolic brain abnormalities have been reported in these regions in BPD. Using novel fMRI protocols, we investigated the neural basis of negative affective interference with cognitive processing targeting these regions...
July 30, 2015: Psychiatry Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25999338/hedonic-and-disgust-taste-perception-in-borderline-personality-disorder-and-depression
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gonzalo Arrondo, Graham K Murray, Emma Hill, Bence Szalma, Krishna Yathiraj, Chess Denman, Robert B Dudas
Depression and borderline personality disorder (BPD) are both thought to be accompanied by alterations in the subjective experience of environmental rewards. We evaluated responses in women to sweet, bitter and neutral tastes (juice, quinine and water): 29 with depression, 17 with BPD and 27 healthy controls. The BPD group gave lower pleasantness and higher disgust ratings for quinine and juice compared with the control group; the depression group did not differ significantly from the control group. Juice disgust ratings were related to self-disgust in BPD, suggesting close links between abnormal sensory processing and self-identity in BPD...
July 2015: British Journal of Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26003420/sleep-wake-patterns-of-adolescents-with-borderline-personality-disorder-and-bipolar-disorder
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christophe Huỳnh, Jean-Marc Guilé, Jean-Jacques Breton, Roger Godbout
Sleep-wake patterns are rarely examined in adolescents with borderline personality disorder (BPD) or bipolar disorder (BD). Within a developmental perspective, this study explores the sleep-wake cycle of adolescents aged 12-17 years with BPD or BD and healthy controls (HC) during periods with and without entrainment by school/work schedules. Eighteen euthymic BPD, six euthymic BD, and 20 HC adolescents wore wrist actigraphy during nine consecutive days to assess sleep-wake patterns. During school/work days, BPD adolescents spent more time awake when they were in bed compared to HC and BD adolescents (p = 0...
April 2016: Child Psychiatry and Human Development
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26061018/construct-validity-of-the-dsm-5-section-iii-personality-trait-profile-for-borderline-personality-disorder
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jaime L Anderson, Martin Sellbom
This study evaluated the nomological network of the borderline personality disorder (BPD) trait profile in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (5th ed. [DSM-5]) Section III. BPD symptoms include a variety of maladaptive thoughts and behaviors, and it is important to determine if the Section III trait operationalization for BPD captures these behavioral symptoms, as well as shows similar associations as the traditional Section II version with external criteria. For this purpose, we used a sample of 285 undergraduate students and conducted correlation and regression analyses to delineate the associations between Section III BPD traits and conceptually relevant external criteria...
September 2015: Journal of Personality Assessment
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