| Literature DB >> 28138924 |
Annegret Krause-Utz1,2,3,4, Rachel Frost5, Dorina Winter6,7, Bernet M Elzinga5,8.
Abstract
Dissociation involves disruptions of usually integrated functions of consciousness, perception, memory, identity, and affect (e.g., depersonalization, derealization, numbing, amnesia, and analgesia). While the precise neurobiological underpinnings of dissociation remain elusive, neuroimaging studies in disorders, characterized by high dissociation (e.g., depersonalization/derealization disorder (DDD), dissociative identity disorder (DID), dissociative subtype of posttraumatic stress disorder (D-PTSD)), have provided valuable insight into brain alterations possibly underlying dissociation. Neuroimaging studies in borderline personality disorder (BPD), investigating links between altered brain function/structure and dissociation, are still relatively rare. In this article, we provide an overview of neurobiological models of dissociation, primarily based on research in DDD, DID, and D-PTSD. Based on this background, we review recent neuroimaging studies on associations between dissociation and altered brain function and structure in BPD. These studies are discussed in the context of earlier findings regarding methodological differences and limitations and concerning possible implications for future research and the clinical setting.Entities:
Keywords: Borderline personality disorder; Brain structure and function; Depersonalization disorder; Dissociation; Dissociative identity disorder; Neuroimaging; Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD); Trauma
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28138924 PMCID: PMC5283511 DOI: 10.1007/s11920-017-0757-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Psychiatry Rep ISSN: 1523-3812 Impact factor: 5.285
Overview of the studies on possible links between brain function, brain structure, and dissociation in borderline personality disorder (BPD)
| Authors, year of publication | Groups (sample size), gender | Psychotropic medication status | Comorbidities and trauma history in the patient sample | Neuroimaging technique | Measures of dissociation (trait/state and time of assessment) | Key findings concerning dissociation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hazlett et al. (2012) | • Groups: | Medication-free for at least 6 weeks prior to scanning. | High rates of childhood abuse and neglect in BPD. | Event-related fMRI during processing of neutral, pleasant, and unpleasant pictures from the IAPS, each of which presented twice within their respective trial block/run. | Self-reported trait dissociation (DES) | BPD patients showed greater amygdala reactivity and prolonged amygdala activation to repeated emotional versus neutral IAPS pictures. |
| Hoerst et al. (2010) | • Groups: | Free of current psychotropic medication for at least 3 months prior to scanning procedure. | Some patients met criteria for current/lifetime posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD; 11/13), | Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), to measure neurometabolic concentrations (glutamate levels) in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) | Self-reported trait dissociation (DES). | Significantly higher levels of glutamate in the ACC in patients with BPD as compared with healthy controls. Positive correlation between glutamate concentrations and dissociation as well as between glutamate concentration and subscores of the borderline symptom |
| Irle et al. (2007) | • Groups: | 8 patients were on antidepressant medication (SSRI) and 6 were occasionally treated with sedatives (e.g., benzodiazepine). | High rates of physical and sexual abuse in childhood and adolescence. | Structural MRI to assess volumes of the superior (precuneus and postcentral gyrus) and inferior parietal cortices | Presence of comorbid dissociative disorders (SCID-D) and dissociative symptoms such as depersonalization and derealization (DIB) | BPD patients with comorbid DA or DID had significantly increased volumes of the left postcentral gyrus compared to healthy controls (+13%) and BPD patients without these disorders (+11%). In BPD subjects, stronger depersonalization was significantly correlated to larger right precuneus volumes. |
| Kluetsch et al. (2012) | • Groups: | Unmedicated sample | Some patients met criteria for current/lifetime PTSD (9/9), MDD (0/18), as well as eating disorders and (other) anxiety disorders, current MDD, substance abuse, and lifetime schizophrenia or bipolar I were excluded. | FMRI during painful heat versus neutral temperature stimulation (thermal sensory anlayzer II) | Self-reported trait dissociation (DES) and state dissociation, assessed prior to and immediately after scanning (DSS) | Higher self-reported trait dissociation was associated with an attenuated signal decrease of the default mode network in response to painful stimulation. |
| Kraus et al. (2009) | • Groups: | Free of psychotropic medication for at least 2 weeks before scanning procedure. | 12 BPD patients met criteria for current PTSD. Lifetime MDD ( | FMRI during heat stimulation, assessed in five stimulation blocks (each for 30 s) with individually adapted temperature | Self-reported trait dissociation (DES) and state dissociation at the time of scanning (DSS) | Both groups of BPD patients did not differ significantly in pain sensitivity, while amygdala deactivation was more pronounced in BPD patients with co-occurring PTSD. Amygdala deactivation was independent of state dissociation. |
| Krause-Utz et al. (2014a) | • Groups: | Medication-free for at least 14 days (in the case of fluoxetine, 28 days) prior to scanning procedure. | All BPD patients had a history of childhood abuse/interpersonal trauma. Some patients met criteria for current/lifetime PTSD (9/11), other anxiety, and eating disorders. Current MDD, substance abuse (6 months prior to scan) and lifetime schizophrenia or bipolar I were excluded | Event-related fMRI during performance of an emotional working memory task (EWMT, adapted Sternberg item recognition task) with negative versus neutral interpersonal IAPS pictures | Self-reported trait dissociation (DES) and state dissociation immediately before and after scanning (DSS4). | In the BPD group, increase of self-reported dissociative states (DSS4 scores) over the course of the EWMT positively predicted bilateral amygdala connectivity with and left insula, left precentral gyrus, right thalamus, and right anterior cingulate during emotional distraction. |
| Krause-Utz et al. (2012) | • Groups: | Medication-free for at least 14 days (in the case of fluoxetine, 28 days) prior to scanning procedure. | All BPD patients had a history of interpersonal trauma (including severe childhood abuse/neglect). Some patients met criteria for current/lifetime PTSD (9/11). Current MDD, substance abuse, and lifetime schizophrenia or bipolar I were excluded. | Event-related fMRI during performance of an emotional working memory task (EWMT, adapted Sternberg item recognition task) with negative versus neutral interpersonal IAPS pictures. | Self-reported trait dissociation (DES) and state dissociation immediately before and after scanning (DSS4) | In the BPD group, increase of self-reported dissociative states (DSS4 scores) over the course of the EWMT negatively predicted bilateral amygdala activity during emotional distraction. |
| Krause-Utz et al. (2015) | • Groups: | Free of psychotropic medication at least 4 weeks before scanning. | Some patients met criteria for current/lifetime PTSD (14/18), other anxiety disorders. and eating disorders. Lifetime diagnosis of psychotic disorder, bipolar I disorder, and alcohol/substance abuse 6 months prior to scan were excluded. | FMRI during a differential delay aversive conditioning paradigm with an electric shock as unconditioned stimulus and two neutral pictures as conditioned stimuli (CS+ and CS−) | Self-reported trait dissociation (DES) and state dissociation before and after scan (DSS) | Amygdala habituation to CS+paired (CS+ in temporal contingency with the aversive event) during acquisition was found in HC, but not in patients. No significant correlations with dissociative symptoms. |
| Krause-Utz et al. (2014b) | • Groups: | Medication-free for at least 14 days (in the case of fluoxetine, 28 days) prior to scanning procedure. | All BPD patients had a history of interpersonal trauma. Some patients met criteria for current PTSD ( | Resting state (RS) fMRI was acquired to investigate RS functional connectivity in the medial temporal lobe network (seed: amygdala), salience network (seed: dorsal ACC), and default mode network (seed: ventral ACC). | Self-reported trait dissociation (DES) | Self-reported trait dissociation positively predicted amygdala connectivity with dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and negatively predicted amygdala connectivity with during resting state. |
| Krause-Utz et al. (submitted) | • Groups: | Free of psychotropic medication for at least 4 weeks prior to the study. | All patients reported at least one type of severe to extreme childhood trauma. | FMRI to measure changes in BOLD signal, combining script-driven imagery (to experimentally induce dissociation) with a subsequent EWMT (to investigate working memory performance during emotional distraction) | Dissociation was induced in 17 patients, while 12 patients and 18 HC were exposed to a personalized neutral script. | BPDd showed overall WM impairments, significantly reduced bilateral amygdala activity (across conditions) and reduced left cuneus, lingual gyrus, and posterior cingulate activity (during negative distractors) compared to BPDn. Inferior frontal gyrus activity was higher in both BPD groups than in HC. BPDd further showed a stronger coupling of amygdala with right superior/middle temporal gyrus, right middle occipital gyrus, left inferior parietal lobule, and left claustrum than BPDn and HC. |
| Lange et al. (2005) | • Groups: | 5 BPD patients were on antidepressant medication and some were occasionally treated with benzodiazepines ( | All BPD participants had experienced severe childhood sexual and physical abuse. Some patients met criteria for current PTSD ( | 18Fluoro-2-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) to assess glucose metabolism in temporo-parietal cortices | Presence of comorbid dissociative disorders (SCID-D) and self-reported trait dissociation (DES) | BPD patients demonstrated reduced FDG uptake in the right temporal pole/anterior fusiform gyrus and in the left precuneus and posterior cingulate cortex. Impaired memory performance among borderline subjects was significantly correlated with metabolic activity in ventromedial and lateral temporal cortices. |
| Ludascher et al. (2010) | • Group: BPD patients ( | Medication-free for at least 14 days (in the case of fluoxetine, 28 days) prior to scanning procedure. | 10 BPD patients had comorbid PTSD following severe childhood abuse (6 patients reporting sexual abuse, 3 patients reporting physical abuse, and 1 patient reporting neglect). | FMRI to measure changes in BOLD signal during script-driven imagery: participants were exposed to a personalized dissociative-inducing script (versus a neutral script) during the fMRI scan. | Self-reported trait dissociation (DES) and state dissociation before and immediately after script inside the MRI scanner (DSS-4) | BPD patients showed a significant increase in the left inferior frontal gyrus during the dissociation script. DSS4 ratings positively predicted activity in the left superior frontal gyrus and negatively predicted activity in the right middle and inferior temporal gyrus. |
| Niedtfeld et al. (2013) | • Groups: | Free of psychotropic medication | 21 of the BPD patients met criteria for current PTSD. Traumatic events included severe physical and sexual childhood abuse. | Structural MRI to assess anatomical scans. Whole-brain gray matter volumes (GMV) were studied using voxel-based morphometry (VBM). | Self-reported trait dissociation (DES); scores were available in 42 BPD patients. | Trait dissociation (DES score) was positively correlated to GMV in the middle temporal gyrus in BPD. |
| Paret et al. (2016) | • Group: BPD patients ( | All participants were on stable medication. | Real-time fMRI-based neurofeedback training comprising of four sessions, in which participants viewed aversive images and received feedback from a thermometer displaying amygdala BOLD signals. Amygdala activity and functional connectivity were studied. | Self-reported state dissociation (DSS4) at the end of each run | Task-related amygdala-ventromedial prefrontal cortex connectivity was altered across the four sessions, with an increased connectivity during instructed emotion regulation versus viewing emotional pictures without regulation. Self-reported state dissociation and “lack of emotional awareness” decreased with training. | |
| Rusch et al. (2007) | • Groups: | Medication-free (including methylphenidate) for at least 2 weeks prior to scanning procedure | 5 patients met criteria for current PTSD, 10 patients reported a history of sexual abuse in childhood, and 14 patients met criteria for past MDD. Exclusion of current major depression, substance abuse 6 months prior to study, lifetime substance dependence, schizophrenia, and bipolar I. | Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) was used to measure mean diffusivity and fractional anisotropy in the inferior frontal white matter | Self-reported trait dissociation (DES) | Patients showed increased mean diffusivity in inferior frontal white matter, which was associated with higher levels of dissociative symptoms, dysfunctional affect regulation, anger-hostility, and general psychopathology but not associated with a history of sexual abuse. |
| Sar et al. (2007) | • Groups: | Medication-free for at least 1 month prior to study | All patients reported at least one type of severe childhood abuse and/or neglect, 15 patients had comorbid BPD+DID, and 6 patients had DID without BPD. | Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) with Tc99m-hexamethylpropylenamine (HMPAO) as a tracer was used to measure regional cerebral blood flow. | Self-reported trait dissociation (DES) | Patients showed decreased reduced cerebral blood flow in the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) and occipital regions bilaterally. There was no significant correlation between rCBF ratios of the regions of interest and self-reported dissociation. |
| Wingenfeld et al. (2009) | • Groups: | 12 of the BPD samples received psychotropic medication (including antidepressants and neuroleptics). | 17 BPD patients reported at least mild PTSD symptoms and 5 patients fulfilled criteria for current PTSD. | fMRI to measure changes in BOLD signal during performance of an individualized emotional stroop task (EST), with neutral, general negative words, and individual negative words (selected from a prior interview with each participant). | Self-reported state dissociation before and after scanning (DSS21 akut) as well as dissociation within the past 7 days (DSS21) | Overall BPD patients had slower reaction times, which however were not correlated with dissociation. Healthy controls—but not BPD patients—showed significant recruitment of the ACC for negative versus neutral and individual negative versus neutral conditions, respectively. No significant correlations between DSS scores and BOLD signal were reported. |
| Winter et al. (2015) | • Groups: | Free of psychotropic medication for at least 4 weeks prior to the study. | 7 patients in the BPDn group and 8 in the BPDd group met criteria for current PTSD. Comorbidity with current (other) anxiety and eating disorders was evident. Lifetime psychotic disorder, bipolar I disorder, mental retardation, and alcohol/substance abuse 6 months prior to scan were excluded | fMRI to measure changes in BOLD signal, combining script-driven imagery (to experimentally induce dissociation) with a subsequent emotional stroop task (EST; containing negative, neutral, and positive words—to measure cognitive control of emotional material). | Dissociation was induced in 18 patients, while 19 patients and 19 HC were exposed to a personalized neutral script. | BPD patients after dissociation induction (BPDd) showed overall slower and less accurate responses as well as longer reaction times for negative versus neutral words than BPDn. |
| Wolf et al. (2011) | • Groups: | All BPD patients were on stable medication for at least 2 weeks before scanning (psychotropic medication included antidepressants, mood stabilizers, and antipsychotics). | Some patients met criteria for current/lifetime MDD (9/5), past substance abuse ( | RS-fMRI was acquired to investigate RS functional connectivity in large-scale brain networks. | Self-reported dissociation (DSS) | Self-reported state dissociation and tension (DSS) positively predicted RS functional connectivity of the insula and precuneus in the BPD group. |
| Wolf et al. (2012) | • Groups: | All BPD patients were on stable medication for at least 2 weeks before scanning (psychotropic medication included antidepressants, mood stabilizers, and antipsychotics). | Some patients met criteria for current/lifetime MDD (8/5), past substance abuse ( | Continuous arterial spin labeling magnetic resonance imaging | Self-reported dissociation (DSS) | Compared to controls, BPD patients exhibited decreased blood flow in the medial OFC, whereas increased blood flow was found in the left and right lateral OFC. Correlation analyses revealed a positive relationship between medial and lateral orbitofrontal blood flow and impulsivity Barrett impulsiveness scale (BIS), but not with dissociation (DSS). |
Note: ADHD attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, BOLD blood oxygen level-dependent, BPD borderline personality disorder, CTQ childhood trauma questionnaire, DA dissociative amnesia, DID dissociative identity disorder, DES dissociation experience scale, DSS4 dissociaton stress scale 4-item version, DIB diagnostic interview for borderline patients, DSS21 dissociation stress scale 21-item version, DSM-IV Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fourth edition, EST emotional stroop task, fMRI functional magnetic resonance imaging, GMV gray matter volume, HC healthy controls, IAPS International Affective Picture System, MDD major depressive disorder, OFC orbitofrontal cortex, PTSD posttraumatic stress disorder, RS resting state, SCID-D structural clinical interview for DSM-IV dissociative disorders, SPD schizotypal personality disorder, SSRI selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, VBM voxel-based morphometry
Fig. 1A schematic overview of brain regions and functions (among others) associated with dissociation in borderline personality disorder. The precise neurobiological underpinnings of dissociation remain elusive, but there is evidence for a link between dissociative states/traits and altered (co)activity in brain networks involved in emotion processing and memory (e.g., amygdala and hippocampus/medial temporal lobe memory system), interoception and attention regulation (insula), self-referential processes (e.g., posterior cingulate cortex and precuneus), cognitive control, and arousal modulation (e.g., dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC), inferior frontal gyrus, and anterior cingulate cortex)—functions which may be altered during dissociation