| Literature DB >> 31165440 |
Johannes Sebastian Wrege1,2, Anthony Charles Ruocco3, Sebastian Euler4, Katrin H Preller5, Mareike Busmann4, Louisa Meya4, André Schmidt4, Undine E Lang4, Stefan Borgwardt4, Marc Walter4.
Abstract
Patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD) have a heightened sensitivity to social exclusion. Experimental manipulations have produced inconsistent findings and suggested that baseline negative affect (NA) might influence the experience of exclusion. We administered a standardized social exclusion protocol (Cyberball paradigm) in BPD (n = 39) and age-matched and sex-matched healthy controls (n = 29) to investigate the association of NA on social exclusion and activation in brain regions previously implicated in this paradigm. Compared with controls, patients with BPD showed higher activation during social exclusion in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), and in the right precuneus. Prescan NA ratings were associated with higher brain activation in the ACC and mPFC over all conditions, and post hoc t tests revealed that differences between the groups were only significant when controlling for NA. Brain activation during exclusion was correlated with NA separately for each group. Only BPD patients showed a significant association of NA and exclusion related precuneus activation (r = .52 p = .001). Additionally, BPD patients experienced less feelings of belonging compared with a healthy control (HC) group during inclusion and exclusion, although they estimated their ball possessions significantly higher than did the HC. These findings suggest that baseline NA has a crucial impact on Cyberball-related brain activation. The results underscore the importance of considering levels of NA in social exclusion protocols for participants high in this trait.Entities:
Keywords: Anterior cingulate cortex; Borderline personality disorder; Functional magnetic resonance imaging; Negative affect; Rejection; Social exclusion
Year: 2019 PMID: 31165440 PMCID: PMC6785570 DOI: 10.3758/s13415-019-00716-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1530-7026 Impact factor: 3.282
Sociodemographic and clinical date
| BPD | HC | BPD vs. HC | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Female ( | 30, 76.9 | 25, 86.2 | Fisher’s exact: |
| Male ( | 9, 23.1 | 4, 13.8 | |
| Age in years ( | 27.5, 8.2 | 25.7, 6.0 | |
| Education in years ( | 12.7, 1.9 | 15.9, 2.9 | |
| IQ ( | 97.5, 6.5 | 104.4, 12.0 | |
| Depressive disorders ( | 17, 43.6 | 0, 0.0 | Fisher’s exact: |
| Anxiety disorders ( | 6, 15.4 | 0, 0.0 | Fisher’s exact: |
| Substance-related disorders ( | 14, 35.9 | 0, 0.0 | Fisher’s exact: |
| Eating disorders ( | 5, 12.8 | 0, 0.0 | Fisher’s exact: |
| Somatoform disorders ( | 2, 5.1 | 0, 0.0 | Fisher’s exact: |
| Posttraumatic stress disorder ( | 3, 7.7 | 0, 0.0 | Fisher’s exact: |
| Current psychotropic medication ( | 23, 59.0 | 0, 0.0 | Fisher’s exact: |
| Global Assessment Scale ( | 42.56, 7.87 | – | – |
| Beck Depression Inventory ( | 26.40,10.97 | 2.38, 2.49 | |
| Borderline Symptom List 23 ( | 1.84, 0.91 | 0.19, 0.19 |
Note. BPD = borderline personality disorder; HC = healthy control; M = mean; SD = standard deviation. Global Assessment Scale: Scores of 41–50 indicate serious symptoms (American Psychiatric Association, 2000); Beck Depression Inventory: A cut-off score of 18 indicates clinical relevance (Hautzinger, Bailer, Worall, & Keller, 1995). Borderline Symptom List 23: Validation sample of BPD patients showed M = 2.05, SD = 0.90 (Wolf et al., 2009). *p < .05. **p < .01
Fig. 1Cyberball game screen setup. In addition to the comic, participant pictures and names of other players were shown. The task consisted of three conditions (control, inclusion, exclusion). Different arrow colors represent the ball condition for the participants. Red = the participant did not receive the ball. Green = the participant received the ball. (Color figure online)
Self-report data of Cyberball: Ratings, ball possessions, and NTS belonging scale
| BPD ( | HC ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inclusion | Exclusion | Inclusion | Exclusion | |
| Ball possessions ( | 50.33, 21.76 | 13.97, 11.01 | 38.90, 12.45 | 10.69, 7.04 |
| Belonging NTS ( | 3.62, 0.64 | 3.28, 0.79 | 4.22, 0.46 | 3.67, 0.48 |
Note. BPD = borderline personality disorder; HC = healthy control; M = mean; SD = standard deviation; NTS = Needs Threat Scale
Fig. 2Main effects of ball-tossing condition and group. a Main effect of ball-tossing condition (control, inclusion, exclusion). Extended threshold: k/FWEcluster = 273. b Main effect of group (BPD, HC). Extended threshold: k/FWEcluster=233
Fig. 3a Interaction effect of group (BPD, HC) and ball-tossing condition (control, inclusion, exclusion). Extended threshold: k/FWEcluster = 205. b The t test (BPD > HC) of the exclusion contrast (exclusion > inclusion). Extended threshold: k/FWEcluster = 336
Fig. 4Correlation of negative affect (NA) and brain activation. Simple effect of NA in the full factorial model. Extended threshold: k/FWEcluster = 482