Women with borderline personality disorder do not show altered BOLD responses during response inhibition

  • Julia van Eijk
  • Alexandra Sebastian
  • Annegret Krause-Utz
  • Sylvia Cackowski
  • Traute Demirakca
  • Sarah V Biedermann
  • Klaus Lieb
  • Martin Bohus
  • Christian Schmahl
  • Gabriele Ende
  • Oliver Tüscher

Abstract

Impulsivity is central to borderline personality disorder (BPD). Response inhibition, addressing the ability to suppress or stop actions, is one aspect of behavioral impulse control which is frequently used to assess impulsivity. BPD patients display deficits in response inhibition under stress condition or negative emotions. We assessed whether response inhibition and its neural underpinnings are impaired in BPD when tested in an emotionally neutral setting and when co-morbid attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is excluded. To this end, we studied response inhibition in unmedicated BPD patients and healthy controls (HC) in two independent samples using functional magnetic resonance imaging during Simon-, Go/nogo-, and Stopsignal tasks. BPD patients and HC did not differ significantly in their performance in the Go/nogo and the Stopsignal tasks. Response interference in the Simon task was increased in BPD patients in one sample, but this could not be replicated in the second sample. In both samples, no significant differences in brain activation patterns during any of the tasks were present while the neural impulse control network was robustly activated during the inhibition tasks in both groups. Our results provide evidence that under emotionally neutral conditions response inhibition is not impaired in patients with BPD without co-occurring ADHD.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN0165-1781
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30.12.2015
Externally publishedYes
PubMed 26483213