The American Psychiatric Association (APA) has updated its Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, including with new information specifically addressed to individuals in the European Economic Area. As described in the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, this website utilizes cookies, including for the purpose of offering an optimal online experience and services tailored to your preferences.

Please read the entire Privacy Policy and Terms of Use. By closing this message, browsing this website, continuing the navigation, or otherwise continuing to use the APA's websites, you confirm that you understand and accept the terms of the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, including the utilization of cookies.

×
EditorialsFull Access

Abnormal Sensitization of Neural and Behavioral Responses to Socially Relevant Images in Individuals With Borderline Personality Disorder: Implications for Guiding More Effective Targeting of Treatments

Borderline personality disorder, a debilitating personality disorder characterized by a range of features associated with emotional dysregulation, including affective lability and hyperactivity in response to emotional stimuli, impulsivity, dissociation, suicidal ideation, and difficulties with interpersonal relationships, affects up to 2.7% of the U.S. adult population (1). Psychotherapy treatments for the disorder can be helpful in promoting symptomatic remission and good psychosocial functioning when targeted appropriately, although this is difficult to attain in a sizeable proportion of patients (2, 3).

Identifying functional abnormalities in neural activity underlying cognitive processes that are known to be aberrant in individuals with borderline personality disorder is an important next step to provide objective neural markers to enhance the effectiveness of treatments for individuals with the disorder. For example, a more nuanced understanding of the neural mechanisms of the disorder could help identify specific underlying neural processes for treatments to target. In addition, the degree of normalization of neural abnormalities during treatment could help determine in the future whether a particular treatment is effective for a given individual with the disorder.

One theory proposes that borderline personality disorder is characterized by delayed—or deficient—habituation of behavioral, and underlying neural, responses to salient negative emotional stimuli and events (4). A related theory proposes abnormal sensitization to such stimuli and events, whereby these stimuli continue to be perceived as aversive for longer periods of time after desensitization procedures, such as extinction, in individuals with borderline personality disorder compared with healthy individuals. Yet, although there is some evidence in favor of the deficient habituation theory based on a study of individuals with borderline personality disorder (5), no study examined neural and behavioral responses to repeated presentation of salient emotional stimuli over time in this psychiatric population.

In this issue of the Journal, Denny and colleagues (6) sought to distinguish between these two related theories of borderline personality disorder in a well-designed neuroimaging study, in which repeated negative emotional and neutral images were shown to adults with borderline personality disorder, healthy control adults, and a psychiatric control group of adults with avoidant personality disorder. The authors developed a specific task in which images depicting scenes of negative emotional and neutral social interactions between two or more people were shown five times each during two sessions 3 days apart. The authors examined behavioral responses, as measured by self-reports of negative affect, as well as activity in three key neural regions in the salience network, comprising the amygdala, anterior insula, and dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, regions subserving emotional, interoceptive processing (7, 8) and directed attentional processes. Salience network activity and self-reports were measured over both sessions in each participant group.

The key finding of the study was that while all participants showed habituation of salience network neural activity within each session in response to negative emotional images, only the borderline personality disorder group showed an increase in activity in this neural network between sessions, and less habituation of self-reported negative affect from the first to the second session in this group compared with the two other groups nearly reached statistical significance. Furthermore, abnormal sensitization of salience network activity in response to negative social scenes was positively associated with the degree of abnormal behavioral sensitization to these images (i.e., negative affective ratings) from the first to the second session. Abnormal sensitization of neural activity was also evident for neutral images in the borderline personality disorder group, suggesting that individuals with the disorder may perceive negativity in, and sensitize to, otherwise neutral social situations. Individuals with borderline personality disorder also had greater negative self-reports for neutral images from the first to the second session compared with the other groups, indicating an abnormal behavioral sensitization to these otherwise neutral social scenes. Thus, the authors provide evidence that borderline personality disorder, rather than being characterized by deficient habituation in response to negative emotional stimuli, may instead be characterized by abnormal sensitization to salient stimuli, such that behavioral, and underlying neural, responses are augmented to repeated presentation of these stimuli over time (see Table 1).

TABLE 1. Summary of Patterns of Neural Responses to the Different Experimental Conditions in the Three Participant Groups

ContextHealthy Control GroupBorderline Personality Disorder GroupAvoidant Personality Disorder Group
Within-session
 Negative stimuliHabituation of salience network responsesHabituation of salience network responsesHabituation of salience network responses
 Neutral stimuliHabituation of salience network responsesHabituation of salience network responsesHabituation of salience network responses
Between-session
 Negative stimuliNo sensitization of salience network responsesSensitization of salience network responsesNo sensitization of salience network responses
 Neutral stimuliNo sensitization of salience network responsesSensitization of salience network responsesNo sensitization of salience network responses

TABLE 1. Summary of Patterns of Neural Responses to the Different Experimental Conditions in the Three Participant Groups

Enlarge table

The most innovative aspect of the study was the longitudinal design incorporating two assessments of neural and behavioral responses to repeated presentations of negative and neutral socially relevant images. The design thereby allowed examination not only of habituation of neural and behavioral responses during each session, but also examination of habituation and/or sensitization of these responses between sessions. As a result, the authors were able to show, for the first time, that borderline personality disorder is characterized by deficient habituation and abnormal sensitization of behavioral and salience network neural responses to socially relevant images over a period of days, a longer time period than the focus of previous neuroimaging studies of individuals with the disorder. Another major strength of the study was the inclusion of a control group of individuals with avoidant personality disorder, who share some of the characteristics of individuals with borderline personality disorder, especially hypersensitivity in response to negative evaluation. By showing that individuals with borderline personality disorder differ from both healthy control subjects and individuals with anxious avoidant personality disorder on patterns of sensitization of neural and behavioral responses to socially relevant images, the authors identify a set of neural and behavioral characteristics that are specific to borderline personality disorder and not shared with other personality disorders.

There were some features of the study that need further exploration. In particular, exploratory analyses revealed that individuals with avoidant personality disorder with comorbid social phobia were similar, although not identical, to those with borderline personality disorder in their pattern of salience network sensitization to negative emotional social images. There was a striking laterality effect, whereby the between-session neural sensitization effects in individuals with borderline personality disorder were focused on the right hemisphere. As the authors note, a more nuanced explanation of these findings is needed and should be the subject of future studies.

The study has important implications for treatment, including psychotherapy. For example, some interventions for borderline personality disorder involve revisitation of salient, negative emotional events in attempts to desensitize responses to these events (9, 10). If the disorder is characterized by abnormal sensitization to these events over longer time periods rather than by deficient habituation of emotional responses within a given shorter time (e.g., a therapy session), then it is possible that desensitization during a given therapy session will be an ineffective intervention. Moreover, this type of intervention might exacerbate levels of emotional lability and dysregulation in response to salient negative events at future treatment sessions. Instead, psychotherapy interventions could use strategies that help to counteract abnormal, longer-term sensitization processes by, for example, helping individuals with borderline personality disorder develop emotional regulation skills and use these skills proactively in anticipation of future aversive events. The findings from the research also point to neural targets that could be used to guide the development of novel neuromodulation interventions for individuals with borderline personality disorder.

From the Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh.
Address correspondence to Dr. Phillips ().

The author reports no financial relationships with commercial interests.

References

1 Tomko RL, Trull TJ, Wood PK, et al.: Characteristics of borderline personality disorder in a community sample: comorbidity, treatment utilization, and general functioning. J Pers Disord 2014; 28:734–750Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

2 Zanarini MC: Psychotherapy of borderline personality disorder. Acta Psychiatr Scand 2009; 120:373–377Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

3 Zanarini MC, Frankenburg FR, Reich DB, et al.: Time to attainment of recovery from borderline personality disorder and stability of recovery: a 10-year prospective follow-up study. Am J Psychiatry 2010; 167:663–667LinkGoogle Scholar

4 Krause-Utz A, Keibel-Mauchnik J, Ebner-Priemer U, et al.: Classical conditioning in borderline personality disorder: an fMRI study. Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci 2016; 266:291–305Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

5 Koenigsberg HW, Denny BT, Fan J, et al.: The neural correlates of anomalous habituation to negative emotional pictures in borderline and avoidant personality disorder patients. Am J Psychiatry 2014; 171:82–90LinkGoogle Scholar

6 Denny BT, Fan J, Fels S, et al.: Sensitization of the neural salience network to repeated emotional stimuli following initial habituation in patients with borderline personality disorder. Am J Psychiatry 2018; 175:657–664LinkGoogle Scholar

7 Critchley HD, Wiens S, Rotshtein P, et al.: Neural systems supporting interoceptive awareness. Nat Neurosci 2004; 7:189–195Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

8 Phillips M, Ladouceur C, Drevets W: Neural systems underlying voluntary and automatic emotion regulation: toward a neural model of bipolar disorder. Mol Psychiatry 2008; 13:829Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

9 Bisson JI, Ehlers A, Matthews R, et al.: Psychological treatments for chronic post-traumatic stress disorder: systematic review and meta-analysis. Br J Psychiatry 2007; 190:97–104Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

10 Sripada RK, Rauch SA: Between-session and within-session habituation in prolonged exposure therapy for posttraumatic stress disorder: a hierarchical linear modeling approach. J Anxiety Disord 2015; 30:81–87Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar