| Literature DB >> 26759718 |
Joaquim Soler1,2,3, Matilde Elices1,2,4,5, Juan C Pascual1,2,4, Ana Martín-Blanco1,2,4, Albert Feliu-Soler1,2,4, Cristina Carmona1,4, Maria J Portella1,2,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Impulsivity is considered a core characteristic of borderline personality disorder (BPD). Previous research on the effects of mindfulness training (MT) has shown that it might modify impulsivity-related aspects of BPD. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the impact of MT on various facets of impulsivity in BPD patients.Entities:
Keywords: Borderline personality disorder; Delayed reward; Impulsivity; Mindfulness; Response inhibition; Time perception
Year: 2016 PMID: 26759718 PMCID: PMC4709962 DOI: 10.1186/s40479-015-0035-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Borderline Personal Disord Emot Dysregul ISSN: 2051-6673
Fig. 1Consort diagram of subject flow through the study
Demographic data and clinical characteristics of the sample by treatment group
| Mindfulness | Interpersonal effectiveness | ||||||
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| Demographics | |||||||
| Gender n, (% females) | 17 | (90.0) | 24 | (96.0) | .72 | .57 | |
| Age, M (SD) | 32.95 | (7.48) | 32.00 | (7.49) | −.41 | .68 | |
| Years of education, M (SD) | 12.44 | (3.97) | 11.41 | (3.20) | −.92 | .35 | |
| Marital status n, (% not married) | 13 | (68.4) | 12 | (48.0) | 2.53 | .28 | |
| Clinical characteristics | |||||||
| DIB-R total score, M (SD) | 7.71 | (.98) | 8.17 | (1.40) | 1.16 | .25 | |
| Presence of Axis I co-morbidities, n (%) | |||||||
| - Anxiety Disorders | 17 | (89.5) | 19 | (76.0) | 1.31 | .25 | |
| - Major Depressive Disorder | 13 | (68.4) | 16 | (64.0) | .09 | .75 | |
| - Bulimia Nervosa | 12 | (63.2) | 9 | (36.0) | 3.19 | .07 | |
| - Substance Abuse Disorder | 11 | (57.9) | 20 | (80.0) | 2.53 | .11 | |
| Other PD diagnosis n, (%) | 9 | (64.3) | 16 | (80.0) | 1.04 | .31 | |
| Pharmacological treatment | |||||||
| - SSRI n, (%) | 15 | (78.9) | 14 | (66.7) | .75 | .38 | |
| - Benzodiazepines n, (%) | 9 | (47.4) | 12 | (57.1) | .38 | .53 | |
| - Mood stabilizers n, (%) | 2 | (10.5) | 1 | (4.8) | .47 | .48 | |
| - Antipsychotics n, (%) | 8 | (42.1) | 9 | (42.9) | .00 | .96 | |
Note. DIB-R Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines Revised, PD Personality Disorders, SSRI Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, M Mean, SD Standard Deviation
Pearson correlations between neuropsychological measures (CPT-II, Time Paradigm, SKIP and TCIP) and self-reported impulsivity (BIS-11 subscales)
| BIS-11 | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Attentional | Motor | Non-planning | |
| CPT-II | |||
| Comissions | .11 | .27* | .23 |
| HitRT | .04 | −.22 | −.07 |
| Response Style | .05 | −.03 | −.10 |
| Impulsivity Index | .01 | .23 | .07 |
| Time Paradigm | .10 | −.01 | −.10 |
| SKIP | −.03 | −.05 | −.13 |
| TCIP | .06 | .06 | .15 |
Note. BIS 11 Barrat Impulsiveness Scale, CPT – II Continuous Performance Test, Hit RT Hit Reaction Time, SKIP Single Key Impulsivity Paradigm, TCIP Two Choice Impulsivity Paradigm
*p < .05
Comparison of outcome measures (BIS-11, CPT-II, Time Paradigm, SKIP and TCIP) between participants assigned to mindfulness training (n = 19) and participants assigned to interpersonal effectiveness training (n = 25)
| Mindfulness | Interpersonal effectiveness | |||||||||||
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| Pre | Post | Pre | Post | Time | Group | Group × Time | Cohen’s d [95 % CI] | |||||
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| BIS-11 | ||||||||||||
| Motor | 18.10 | 3.52 | 15.78* | 4.76 | 19.20 | 4.14 | 17.28 | 5.66 | .004 | .30 | .77 | −0.09 [−0.68, 0.51] |
| Attentional | 19.68 | 2.90 | 18.26* | 3.03 | 18.76 | 3.56 | 18.36 | 3.23 | .07 | .63 | .30 | 0.32 [−0.29, 0.91] |
| Non-planning | 23.73 | 6.34 | 21.05** | 5.83 | 24.32 | 7.12 | 23.48 | 5.56 | .006 | .41 | .13 | −0.46 [−1.06, 0.15] |
| CPT-II | ||||||||||||
| Response Style | .72 | 1.20 | .97 | 1.07 | .22 | .40 | .30 | .77 | .21 | .02 | .50 | 0.22 [−0.38, 0.81] |
| Commissions | 11.25 | 9.25 | 9.68 | 7.77 | 14.88 | 8.01 | 13.30 | 7.19 | .09 | .12 | .97 | 0.00 [−0.60, 0.60] |
| Hit RT | 418.30 | 64.60 | 449.03 | 80.08 | 395.27 | 84.27 | 402.95 | 68.31 | .50 | .10 | .39 | 0.37 [−0.24, 0.97] |
| Impulsivity Index | 26.87 | 5.61 | 24.52* | 5.68 | 29.23 | 6.98 | 28.00 | 6.35 | .01 | .11 | .23 | −0.26 [−0.85, 0.34] |
| Time Paradigm | 56.64 | 24.75 | 68.13* | 32.12 | 51.86 | 12.45 | 53.27 | 12.34 | .007 | .11 | .034 | 0.66 [0.04, 1.27] |
| SKIP | 1.19 | .61 | 1.01 | .65 | .96 | .67 | .99 | .57 | .35 | .44 | .18 | 0.40 [−0.21, 1.00] |
| TCIP | 1.32 | .52 | 1.01* | .58 | 1.11 | .55 | 1.24 | -56 | .21 | .96 | .003 | 0.95 [0.31, 1.57] |
Note. M Mean, SD Standard Deviation, BIS – 11 Barrat Impulsiveness Scale, CPT – II Continuous Performance Test, Hit RT Hit Reaction Time, SKIP Single Key Impulsivity Paradigm, TCIP Two Choice Impulsivity Paradigm. Group by time interactions refers to univariate effects, T- test *p < .05, **p < .01. Effect sizes refer to pre- and post-treatment differences
Fig. 2a Time (pre vs. post) × group (mindfulness and interpersonal effectiveness) effects for two choice impulsivity paradigm (TCIP) scores in patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD). Values are shown as means with standard errors represented by vertical bars. Differences in pre – post mean values in the mindfulness group were significant: *p = .003. b Time (pre vs. post) × group (mindfulness and interpersonal effectiveness) effects for time paradigm scores in patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD). Values are shown as means with standard errors represented by vertical bars. Differences in pre – post mean values in the mindfulness group were significant: *p = .034