Department of General Psychiatry, Center for Psychosocial Medicine, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
Department of General Psychiatry, Center for Psychosocial Medicine, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
Neuropharmacology. 2019 Sep 15;156:107463. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropharm.2018.12.010. Epub 2018 Dec 14.
Difficulty in anger control and anger-related aggressive outbursts against others are frequently reported by patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD). Although male sex is a known predictor for aggression, hardly any study has addressed the neural correlates of deficient anger control in male patients with BPD. Building on previous reports in female BPD, we investigated the involvement of lateral antero- and dorsal prefrontal cortex in the control of fast emotional actions and its relation to self-reported tendencies to act out anger. 15 medication-free male patients with BPD and 25 age- and intelligence-matched healthy men took part in a social Approach-Avoidance task in the MR-scanner. This task allows the measurement of neural correlates underlying the control of fast behavioral tendencies to approach happy and avoid angry faces. Hypothesis-driven region-of-interest and exploratory whole brain analyses were used to test for activations of antero- and dorsolateral prefrontal regions and their relation with the amygdala during emotional action control as well as their association with self-reported anger out in male patients with BPD and healthy volunteers. Male patients with BPD showed reduced anterolateral prefrontal activations during emotional action control compared to healthy volunteers. Furthermore, anger out was negatively related to antero- and dorsolateral prefrontal activations, while it was positively related to amygdala activity in male patients with BPD. The current results suggest the involvement of antero- and dorsolateral prefrontal regions in controlling and overriding fast emotional actions. Deficits in lateral prefrontal emotion control seem to be a common neural mechanism underlying anger-related aggression. This article is part of the Special Issue entitled 'Current status of the neurobiology of aggression and impulsivity'.
愤怒控制困难和与愤怒相关的对他人的攻击性爆发经常被边缘型人格障碍 (BPD) 患者报告。尽管男性是攻击性的已知预测因素,但几乎没有研究涉及到 BPD 男性患者愤怒控制不足的神经相关性。基于以前在女性 BPD 中的报告,我们研究了外侧额前和背侧前额皮质在快速情绪行为控制中的作用,及其与自我报告的愤怒行为倾向的关系。15 名未服用药物的 BPD 男性患者和 25 名年龄和智力匹配的健康男性在磁共振扫描仪中进行了社会趋近-回避任务。这项任务允许测量快速行为倾向控制下的神经相关性,以接近快乐和避免愤怒的面孔。假设驱动的感兴趣区域和探索性全脑分析用于测试情绪行为控制期间额前和背外侧前额皮质区域的激活及其与杏仁核的关系,以及它们与 BPD 男性患者和健康志愿者自我报告的愤怒行为的关系。与健康志愿者相比,BPD 男性患者在情绪行为控制期间表现出额前外侧前额皮质激活减少。此外,愤怒行为与额前和背外侧前额皮质的激活呈负相关,而与 BPD 男性患者的杏仁核活动呈正相关。目前的结果表明,额前和背外侧前额皮质区域参与了控制和超越快速情绪行为。外侧前额皮质情绪控制的缺陷似乎是愤怒相关攻击的共同神经机制。本文是特刊“攻击性和冲动性神经生物学的现状”的一部分。