Scan casts new light on neurobiology of borderline personality disorder
By Ruth SoRelle, M.P.H.
People with borderline personality disorder pose a mystery to physicians and psychologists who try to understand and help them.
Those diagnosed with the problem suffer from an inability to understand the actions of others. They frequently have unstable relationships, fly into rages inappropriately, or become depressed and cannot trust the actions and motives of other people.
However, in an interactive game played between two people, each in a functional magnetic resonance imaging scanner, Baylor College of Medicine researchers may have cast a little light on the subject, identifying a malfunction in the way their brains functions, impairing the way they perceive the world and other people. A report on the study appeared in a recent issue of the journal Science.
First physical signature
“This may be the first time a physical signature for a personality disorder has been identified,” said P. Read Montague, Ph.D., professor of neuroscience at BCM and director of the BCM Brown Foundation Human Neuroimaging Laboratory.
In the study, directed by Brooks King-Casas, Ph.D., assistant professor of neuroscience and psychiatry and behavioral sciences at BCM and a member of the College's new Computational Psychiatry Unit, 55 people with borderline personality disorder played a “trust” game with 55 normal people of the same age and social and educational status.
Trust game
In the game, one player called an investor sends $20 to the other called a trustee. The investment is tripled, and the trustee splits the profits with the investor. The trustee decides how much to send back, thus determining whether the investor recoups a profit or not. Profit requires cooperation between trustee and investor.
Both investor and trustee play the game while their brains are scanned by functional MRI devices through use of software called hyperscanning. The fMRI shows areas of blood flow in parts of the brain during the interaction between two people.
Area of the brain lights up
In this study, activity in an area of the brain called the anterior insula, known to respond when “norms” are violated, showed up on the scans. In the normal people, the anterior insula showed activity that responded in direct proportion to the amount of money sent and the money received. However, in people with borderline personality disorder, that part of the brain responded only to sending the money – not to the money received.
The scan casts a new light on the neurobiology of borderline personality disorder, said King-Casas, the study's lead author. Some day, he said, it could be used as a diagnostic tool or even a way to determine the effectiveness of a treatment.
Specific brain association
“For the first time, to my knowledge, we have a specific brain association for people with a personality disorder,” said Stuart Yudofsky, M.D., chair of the Menninger Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at BCM. “It's new and different because it's not a lesion (or injury to the brain) but it is a difference in perceiving information that comes from an interaction.” That is the area where people with borderline personality disorder have the most problem.
“It's important that this biological signature has been identified,” said King-Casas. “It's not just a matter of bad attitudes or a lack of will.”
Help in three areas
Yudofsky agrees that the finding my help eliminate the stigma associated with such disorders. The finding will help in three areas:
- Diagnosis by giving a biologic measure that can be used to determine if a person has the problem.
- Treatment using this brain-based difference to devise cognitive interventions or even medications that will affect the brain reactions.
- Monitoring the effectiveness of treatment by determining how the brain's dysfunctional responses to the input from others change with treatment.
“We have great strength in the area of personality disorders through our relationship with The Menninger Clinic,” said Yudofsky.
Peter Fonagy, Ph.D., of Menninger and the University College London, is a pioneer in treating borderline personality disorder using “mentalizing,” a technique that helps people understand the mental states of other individuals by analyzing their outward behavior. He is a co-author and is hoping to find funding for a study on evaluating such treatment on patients using the functional MRI device.
Others who took part in this work include Carla Sharp, Laura Lomax and Terry Lohrenz, all of BCM.
Funding for this work came from the Child and Family Program at The Menninger Clinic, the National Institute of Mental Health, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
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