46 results on '"Antonia S. New"'
Search Results
2. Hyperreactivity and Impaired Habituation of Startle Amplitude During Unpleasant Pictures in Borderline but Not Schizotypal Personality Disorder: Quantifying Emotion Dysregulation
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Erin A. Hazlett, Kim E. Goldstein, M. Mehmet Haznedar, Margaret M. McClure, M. Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez, Antonia S. New, Marianne Goodman, Usha Govindarajulu, Kalpana Nidhi Kapil-Pair, Abigail Feinberg, Emma Smith, and Elen-Sarrah Dolgopolskaia
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Reflex, Startle ,Borderline Personality Disorder ,Emotions ,Humans ,Amygdala ,Habituation, Psychophysiologic ,Personality Disorders ,Biological Psychiatry - Abstract
Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is characterized by greater intensity of reactions to unpleasant emotional cues and a slower-than-normal return of these responses to baseline. Habituation is defined as decreased response to repeated stimulation. Affect-modulated startle (AMS), a translational psychophysiological approach, is mediated by the amygdala and used to study emotion processing in both humans and animals. This is the first study to examine the specificity of habituation anomalies in BPD during passive emotional and neutral picture processing.A total of 90 participants were studied: patients with BPD (n = 35), patients with schizotypal personality disorder (n = 26; included as a psychopathological comparison group), and healthy control subjects (n = 29). Participants received rigorous clinical assessments, and patients were unmedicated. AMS was examined during a series of intermixed unpleasant, neutral, and pleasant pictures.Compared with the other groups, patients with BPD showed greater overall AMS during unpleasant pictures and prolonged habituation of startle amplitude during unpleasant pictures from early to later trials. The groups did not differ in AMS during neutral or pleasant pictures or self-reported picture valence. Among the patients with BPD, prolonged habituation to unpleasant pictures was associated with greater symptom severity and suicidal/self-harming behavior.These findings 1) indicate that abnormal processing of and habituation to unpleasant pictures is observed in BPD but not schizotypal personality disorder, suggesting that these deficits are not simply characteristics of personality disorders in general; 2) are consistent with studies showing deficient amygdala habituation to unpleasant pictures in BPD; and 3) have significant implications for clinical assessment and treatment of BPD, e.g., alternative therapies for BPD such as gradual exposure to unpleasant emotional stimuli or amygdala neurofeedback may aid habituation deficits.
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- 2022
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3. Cingulate and temporal lobe fractional anisotropy in schizotypal personality disorder.
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Erin A. Hazlett, Kim E. Goldstein, Kazuhiro Tajima-Pozo, Elizabeth R. Speidel, Yuliya Zelmanova, Jonathan J. Entis, Jeremy M. Silverman, Antonia S. New, Harold W. Koenigsberg, M. Mehmet Haznedar, William Byne, and Larry J. Siever
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- 2011
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4. Understanding the role of psychiatric principles in patient care: an important goal of the medical student clerkship in psychiatry
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Leo eSher and Antonia S New
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Education ,Psychiatry ,Suicide ,stigma ,Mentorship ,Medical student ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2016
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5. Amphetamine-induced striatal dopamine release in schizotypal personality disorder
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Xiaoyan Xu, Yosefa A. Modiano, Mark Slifstein, Lawrence S. Kegeles, Antonia S. New, Daniel R. Rosell, Ethan G. Rothstein, Larry J. Siever, Anissa Abi-Dargham, Judy L. Thompson, Margaret M. McClure, Erin A. Hazlett, Harold W. Koenigsberg, and M. Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Dopamine ,Striatum ,Schizotypal Personality Disorder ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Dopamine Uptake Inhibitors ,mental disorders ,Humans ,Medicine ,Amphetamine ,Pharmacology ,Raclopride ,Receptors, Dopamine D2 ,business.industry ,Working memory ,Ventral striatum ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Schizotypal personality disorder ,Corpus Striatum ,030227 psychiatry ,Memory, Short-Term ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Schizophrenia ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Female ,business ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Previous research has suggested that schizotypal personality disorder (SPD), a condition that shares clinical and cognitive features with schizophrenia, may be associated with elevated striatal dopamine functioning; however, there are no published studies of dopamine release within subregions of the striatum in SPD. To characterize dopamine release capacity in striatal subregions and its relation to clinical and cognitive features in SPD. We used positron emission tomography with [11C]raclopride and an amphetamine challenge to measure dopamine D2-receptor availability (binding potential, BPND), and its percent change post-amphetamine (∆BPND) to index amphetamine-induced dopamine release, in subregions of the striatum in 16 SPD and 16 healthy control participants. SPD participants were evaluated with measures of schizotypal symptom severity and working memory. There were no significant group differences in BPND or ∆BPND in any striatal subregion or whole striatum. Among SPD participants, cognitive-perceptual symptoms were associated at trend level with ∆BPND in the ventral striatum, and disorganized symptoms were significantly negatively related to ∆BPND in several striatal subregions. In contrast to previous findings, SPD was not associated with elevated striatal dopamine release. However, in SPD, there was a moderate positive association between ventral striatal dopamine release and severity of cognitive-perceptual symptoms, and negative associations between striatal dopamine release and severity of disorganized symptoms. Future larger scale investigations that allow for the separate examination of subgroups of participants based on clinical presentation will be valuable in further elucidating striatal DA functioning in SPD.
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- 2020
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6. Clinical features of individuals with schizotypal personality disorder with and without suicidal ideation
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Leo Sher, Katelyn N. Challman, Emma C. Smith, Antonia S. New, M. Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez, Margaret M. McClure, Marianne Goodman, René S. Kahn, and Erin A. Hazlett
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Biological Psychiatry - Published
- 2023
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7. Frontal-striatal-thalamic mediodorsal nucleus dysfunction in schizophrenia-spectrum patients during sensorimotor gating.
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Erin A. Hazlett, Monte S. Buchsbaum, Jing Zhang 0002, Randall E. Newmark, Cathryn F. Glanton, Yuliya Zelmanova, M. Mehmet Haznedar, Kingwai Chu, Igor Nenadic, Eileen M. Kemether, Cheuk Y. Tang, Antonia S. New, and Larry J. Siever
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- 2008
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8. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor Val66Met genotype modulates amygdala habituation
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Larry J. Siever, Kim E. Goldstein, M. Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez, David Goldman, Daniel R. Rosell, Colin A. Hodgkinson, Zhifeng Zhou, Antonia S. New, Qiaoping Yuan, and Erin A. Hazlett
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Genotype ,Emotions ,Neuroscience (miscellaneous) ,Amygdala ,Article ,Schizotypal Personality Disorder ,03 medical and health sciences ,Methionine ,0302 clinical medicine ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Habituation ,Habituation, Psychophysiologic ,Psychiatry ,Borderline personality disorder ,Alleles ,Brain-derived neurotrophic factor ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor ,Valine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Schizotypal personality disorder ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Extinction (neurology) ,Endophenotype ,Female ,Psychology ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Neuroscience ,Photic Stimulation ,psychological phenomena and processes ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
A deficit in amygdala habituation to repeated emotional stimuli may be an endophenotype of disorders characterized by emotion dysregulation, such as borderline personality disorder (BPD). Amygdala reactivity to emotional stimuli is genetically modulated by brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) variants. Whether amygdala habituation itself is also modulated by BDNF genotypes remains unknown. We used imaging-genetics to examine the effect of BDNF Val66Met genotypes on amygdala habituation to repeated emotional stimuli. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in 57 subjects (19 BPD patients, 18 patients with schizotypal personality disorder [SPD] and 20 healthy controls [HC]) during a task involving viewing of unpleasant, neutral, and pleasant pictures, each presented twice to measure habituation. Amygdala responses across genotypes (Val66Met SNP Met allele-carriers vs. Non-Met carriers) and diagnoses (HC, BPD, SPD) were examined with ANOVA. The BDNF 66Met allele was significantly associated with a deficit in amygdala habituation, particularly for emotional pictures. The association of the 66Met allele with a deficit in habituation to unpleasant emotional pictures remained significant in the subsample of BPD patients. Using imaging-genetics, we found preliminary evidence that deficient amygdala habituation may be modulated by BDNF genotype.
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- 2017
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9. Validation of Remote Administration of Social Cognitive Assessments in Pregnant Women
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Nicole E. Derish, Daniel Katz, Deborah Li, M. Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez, Margaret M. McClure, Emma Smith, Antonia S. New, Vignesh Rajasekaran, Erin A. Hazlett, Danielle Torres, Julie Spicer, and Harold W. Koenigsberg
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Pregnancy ,Social network ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Correlation ,Social support ,Social cognition ,medicine ,business ,Psychology ,Biological Psychiatry ,Social cognitive theory ,Social behavior ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Background: Social cognition, and its relation to social behaviors during pregnancy and postpartum, merits further investigation Additionally, the Covid-19 pandemic has increased the need to administer assessments remotely We aimed to validate remote administration of social cognition tasks (the Movie for the Assessment of Social Cognition (MASC) and the Reading of the Mind in the Eyes (RMET)) in pregnant women Methods: We compared performance of 15 pregnant women (mean age=20 71,SD=6 17) on the MASC administered via zoom and RMET via an online survey platform with 17 non-pregnant women (mean age=38 52,SD=12 46), who completed them in-person prior to the pandemic Participants also completed self-report assessments of social support (Interpersonal Support Evaluation List (ISEL);Social Network Index (SNI)) Results: Since there were significant age differences between groups, age was entered as a covariate MASC scores did not differ between remote (mean=32 07,SD=4 88) and in-person (mean=33 19,SD=7 00) administration, F(1,33)=0 131,p=0 720) RMET accuracy also did not differ between remote (mean=24 53,SD=3 63) and in-person (mean=26 75,SD=7 09) administration, F(1,22)=0 901,p=0 353) RMET and MASC hypomentalizing errors were negatively correlated (r= -0 451, p=0 03) and there was a trend level correlation between the MASC and RMET (r=0 394, p=0 063) MASC accuracy correlated with ISEL total (r=0 415, p=0 05), and RMET with SNI diversity (r=0 547, p=0 02) and number (r=0 521, p=0 03) of people within one’s social network Conclusions: Social cognition tasks correlated with self-reported social support, validating the use of these assessments in pregnant women Results also support the validity of remote administration for social cognition measures, which allows for greater access to vulnerable populations, although pregnancy may have influenced performance Supported By: Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Keywords: Social Cognition, Remote Assessment, Pregnancy
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- 2021
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10. Clinical features and psychiatric comorbidities of borderline personality disorder patients with versus without a history of suicide attempt
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Marianne Goodman, Amanda Fisher, Caitlin Kelliher, Larry J. Siever, Antonia S. New, Erin A. Hazlett, Justin D. Penner, Harold W. Koenigsberg, and Leo Sher
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Poison control ,Suicide, Attempted ,Comorbidity ,Impulsivity ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Suicide prevention ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Borderline Personality Disorder ,Narcissistic personality disorder ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,Borderline personality disorder ,Biological Psychiatry ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,Suicide attempt ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Substance abuse ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Major depressive disorder ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD) are at high risk for suicidal behavior. However, many BPD patients do not engage in suicidal behavior. In this study, we compared clinical features of BPD patients with or without a history of suicide attempts and healthy volunteers. Compared with healthy volunteers, both BPD groups had higher Affective Lability Scale (ALS), ALS – Depression-Anxiety Subscale, Barratt Impulsivity Scale (BIS), and Lifetime History of Aggression (LHA) scores and were more likely to have a history of temper tantrums. BPD suicide attempters had higher ALS, ALS – Depression-Anxiety Subscale and LHA scores and were more likely to have a history of non-suicidal self-injury or temper tantrums compared to BPD non-attempters. Also, BPD suicide attempters were more likely to have a history of comorbid major depressive disorder and less likely to have comorbid narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) in comparison to BPD non-attempters. About 50% of study participants in each BPD group had a history of comorbid substance use disorder (SUD). Our study indicates that BPD patients with a history of suicide attempt are more aggressive, affectively dysregulated and less narcissistic than BPD suicide non-attempters.
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- 2016
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11. Startle amplitude during unpleasant pictures is greater in veterans with a history of multiple-suicide attempts and predicts a future suicide attempt
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Raymond R. Goetz, Marianne Goodman, Nicholas J. Blair, Nicolas Fernandez, M. Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez, Kathryn A. Mascitelli, Erin A. Hazlett, and Antonia S. New
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Population ,Poison control ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Suicide prevention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Valence (psychology) ,Psychiatry ,education ,Biological Psychiatry ,education.field_of_study ,Suicide attempt ,Endocrine and Autonomic Systems ,General Neuroscience ,030227 psychiatry ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Neurology ,Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale ,Psychology ,Psychosocial ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Recent studies demonstrate that veterans exhibit higher suicide risk compared with the general U.S. population. A prior suicide attempt is a well-documented predictor of suicide death. Despite increased attention to clinical risk factors of suicide and efforts to develop psychosocial interventions to reduce suicide risk, the underlying biological factors that confer this risk are not well understood. This study examined affect-modulated startle (AMS) during a series of intermixed unpleasant, neutral, and pleasant pictures in a sample of 108 demographically-matched veterans at low (passive ideators: n = 26) and high risk (active ideators: n = 29; single attempters: n = 28; and multiple attempters: n = 25) for suicide based on the Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale. An exploratory aim involved a longitudinal component in a subset of the high-risk sample that went on to participate in a randomized 6-month clinical trial. We investigated whether baseline AMS predicts a subsequent suicide attempt at 12-month follow-up. Compared with the other three groups, multiple attempters showed greater startle potentiation during unpleasant pictures and deficient overall startle habituation from early to later trials. The groups did not differ in startle during neutral or pleasant pictures, or self-reported picture valence. Greater startle during unpleasant pictures was associated with greater emotion dysregulation as measured by the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale and a future suicide attempt assessed prospectively at 12-month follow-up. These findings suggest that startle potentiation during unpleasant pictures in multiple-suicide attempters is a promising psychophysiological biomarker of suicide risk and underscore the clinical importance of targeting emotion dysregulation in the treatment of patients at-risk for suicide.
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- 2016
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12. Neuroimaging predictors of response to cognitive remediation and social skills training: A pilot study in veterans with schizophrenia
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Margaret M. McClure, M. Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez, Larry J. Siever, Joseph Triebwasser, King-Wai Chu, Erin A. Hazlett, Daniel R. Rosell, Fiona S. Graff, Philip R. Szeszko, and Antonia S. New
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Neuroscience (miscellaneous) ,Pilot Projects ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Social Skills ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Social skills ,Neuroimaging ,Social cognition ,Fractional anisotropy ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Veterans ,Working memory ,Superior longitudinal fasciculus ,medicine.disease ,White Matter ,Cognitive Remediation ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,Memory, Short-Term ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Schizophrenia ,Cognitive remediation therapy ,Anisotropy ,Feasibility Studies ,Female ,Nerve Net ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Neuroimaging may predict response to cognitive remediation therapy and social skills training (CRT + SST) in schizophrenia. Identifying biological predictors of response is crucial for treatment decision making given not all patients respond to such interventions. Nineteen veterans with schizophrenia enrolled in an 8-week trial of CRT + SST. Ten participants completed diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) at baseline. Baseline fractional anisotropy (FA) in the superior longitudinal fasciculus (SLF) and overall average FA predicted improvements in visual-spatial working memory, and social cognition, respectively. Neuroimaging may be useful in identifying therapeutic targets in schizophrenia.
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- 2019
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13. Developmental differences in diffusion tensor imaging parameters in borderline personality disorder
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Marianne Goodman, Antonia S. New, Uday Patil, M. Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez, Luis H. Ripoll, David Carpenter, Erin A. Hazlett, and Jennifer Avedon
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Neural substrate ,Neuroimaging ,Development ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Brain mapping ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Diagnosis, Differential ,White matter ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Borderline Personality Disorder ,mental disorders ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,medicine ,Inferior longitudinal fasciculus ,Humans ,Young adult ,Borderline personality disorder ,Biological Psychiatry ,Brain Mapping ,Brain ,Reproducibility of Results ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Case-Control Studies ,Anisotropy ,Female ,Self Report ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Diffusion MRI ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
BackgroundBorderline personality disorder (BPD) often presents during adolescence. Early detection and intervention decreases its subsequent severity. However, little is known about early predictors and biological underpinnings of BPD. The observed abnormal functional connectivity among brain regions in BPD led to studies of white matter, as the neural substrate of connectivity. However, diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) studies in adult BPD have been inconclusive, and, as yet, there are no published DTI studies in borderline adolescents.MethodsWe conducted DTI tractography in 38 BPD patients (14-adolescents, 24-adults) and 32 healthy controls (13-adolescents, 19-adults).ResultsWe found bilateral tract-specific decreased fractional anisotropy (FA) in inferior longitudinal fasciculus (ILF) in BPD adolescents compared to adolescent controls. ILF FA was significantly higher in adolescent controls compared to BPD adolescents, BPD adults and adult controls (Wilks F(3,57) = 3.55, p
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- 2013
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14. Biological Advances in Personality Disorders
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M. Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez, Lauren C Zaluda, and Antonia S. New
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Candidate gene ,Conceptualization ,Antisocial personality disorder ,Diagnostic system ,medicine.disease ,Personality disorders ,Schizotypal personality disorder ,Biosocial theory ,Developmental psychology ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Psychology ,Borderline personality disorder ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Neurobiological studies have focused primarily on DSM-IV axis I disorders, as they display extensive, and often severe and episodic symptomatology. However, there is an emerging focus on the neurobiology of personality disorders, consisting largely of maladaptive traits that impair functioning and adaptation to the environment. These clusters of maladapative traits are partially heritable, associated with specific candidate genes that are beginning to be identified by preliminary genetic studies, and are grounded in specific neurocircuitry changes; borderline personality disorder (BPD), antisocial personality disorder (ASPD), and schizotypal personality disorder (STPD) have been the most studied and have the largest empirical evidence. Greater understanding of the neurobiological grounding of these disorders will in part inform the conceptualization of personality disorders in the new nonaxial diagnostic system in DSM−5.
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- 2013
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15. Empathy and Alexithymia in Borderline Personality Disorder: Clinical and Laboratory Measures
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Antonia S. New, Marianne Goodman, aan het Marije Rot, Erin A. Hazlett, Sophie A. Lazarus, M. Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez, Harold W. Koenigsberg, Larry J. Siever, Shauna R. Weinstein, E. Zipursky, and Luis H. Ripoll
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,Empathy ,Avoidant personality disorder ,Personality Disorders ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Young Adult ,Alexithymia ,Borderline Personality Disorder ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Affective Symptoms ,Borderline personality disorder ,Empathic concern ,Aged ,media_common ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Perspective (graphical) ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Distress ,Feeling ,Female ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
The authors aimed to understand the role of alexithymia in borderline personality disorder (BPD). A total of 79 BPD patients, 76 healthy controls, and 39 patients with avoidant personality disorder (AVPD) were included. Alexithymia and its influence on interpersonal functioning were assessed. The authors explored group differences in empathy in relation to interpersonal function, and they measured responses to emotional pictures with a computer task in which subjects focused either on the experience of the individual in the picture or the subject's own imagined experience. Patients with BPD and AVPD had higher alexithymia than those in the control group. Patients with BPD had more difficulty identifying their own emotions than patients with AVPD. Patients with BPD reported poorer ability to take the perspective of others, but higher distress; they showed intact "empathic concern." Differences in computer task performance were clearest during self-relevant responses to negatively valenced pictures. BPD patients are highly responsive to the feelings of others, but they are impaired in identifying/describing feelings and in taking the perspective of others.
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- 2012
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16. Neuroimaging and Borderline Personality Disorder
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M. Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez, Antonia S. New, and Luis H. Ripoll
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neuroimaging ,Sadistic personality disorder ,medicine ,Psychology ,medicine.disease ,Borderline personality disorder ,Clinical psychology - Published
- 2012
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17. 681. Diagnosis of Schizotypal Personality Disorder, Sex-Gender and Age Effects on Neuropsychological Performance
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Erin A. Hazlett, Larry J. Siever, Antonia S. New, Caitlin Kelliher, Harold W. Koenigsberg, Margaret McNamara, Justin D. Penner, and Amanda Fisher
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050903 gender studies ,Sex gender ,05 social sciences ,Neuropsychology ,medicine ,0509 other social sciences ,Psychology ,medicine.disease ,Schizotypal personality disorder ,Biological Psychiatry ,Developmental psychology - Published
- 2017
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18. Parental Burden Associated with Borderline Personality Disorder in Female Offspring
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Perry Hoffman, Antonia S. New, Marianne Goodman, Uday Patil, Zachary A. Weinstein, and Joseph Triebwasser
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Adult ,Parents ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Offspring ,Family support ,Standard of living ,Social Environment ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Borderline Personality Disorder ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Young adult ,Child ,Psychiatry ,Borderline personality disorder ,health care economics and organizations ,Analysis of Variance ,Parenting ,Social environment ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Mental Health ,Conduct disorder ,Acting Out ,Female ,Psychology - Abstract
To identify aspects of parental burden associated with borderline personality disorder (BPD), an anonymous internet survey linked to BPD support websites was developed for parents to complete on their BPD offspring and unaffected siblings. The questions cover aspects of the child's life from pregnancy through young adulthood, and query about the impact of the child's BPD on six domains of the parent's life, including physical and emotional health, marriage, job, standard of living, social life, and career trajectory. Additionally, financial burden was assessed with questions pertaining to insurance and out-of pocket costs associated with the BPD disorder. BPD offspring were identified by meeting diagnostic criteria embedded within the survey and having been given a diagnosis of BPD by a professional at some point in their life. We report on 233 female offspring meeting strict criteria for BPD. Parents of daughters with BPD endorsed varying levels of impact on the six domains comprising burden with the largest impact on emotional health which was impacted in over 88% of the respondents. Over 50% of parents endorsed four or greater of the six burden items. Particular aspects of the offspring's BPD symptom profile correlated with intensity of parental burden included including problems in adolescence with acting out behavior (p < .000), property destruction (.003), delusional symptoms (.007), and hallucinatory symptoms (.008). A subgroup of respondents provided data on specific financial expenses. The average and median out-of-pocket expense was $60,087, and $10,000. Insurance costs totaled an average of $108,251 with a mean of $20,000. The average cost per year after diagnosis was $14,606 out-of-pocket and $45,573 billed to insurance. The median cost per year after diagnosis was $3,667 out-of-pocket, and $12,500 billed to insurance. After adjusting for household income, a female proband who had been raped incurred roughly $40,000 more in BPD-related costs, while a diagnosis of conduct disorder led to about $50,000 in additional costs. Parents of female offspring with BPD experience burden in multiple domains of their life and many have incurred substantial financial expense. Increasing awareness of co-morbid conditions in the BPD proband that significantly increase parental burden may be indicators for the provision of increased family support.
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- 2011
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19. Borderline personality disorder
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Frank Leweke, Falk Leichsenring, Antonia S. New, Johannes Kruse, and Eric Leibing
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Borderline Personality Disorder ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Humans ,Personality ,Medicine ,General Medicine ,business ,Clinical psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Recent research findings have contributed to an improved understanding and treatment of borderline personality disorder. This disorder is characterised by severe functional impairments, a high risk of suicide, a negative effect on the course of depressive disorders, extensive use of treatment, and high costs to society. The course of this disorder is less stable than expected for personality disorders. The causes are not yet clear, but genetic factors and adverse life events seem to interact to lead to the disorder. Neurobiological research suggests that abnormalities in the frontolimbic networks are associated with many of the symptoms. Data for the effectiveness of pharmacotherapy vary and evidence is not yet robust. Specific forms of psychotherapy seem to be beneficial for at least some of the problems frequently reported in patients with borderline personality disorder. At present, there is no evidence to suggest that one specific form of psychotherapy is more effective than another. Further research is needed on the diagnosis, neurobiology, and treatment of borderline personality disorder.
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- 2011
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20. Tryptophan-hydroxylase 2 haplotype association with borderline personality disorder and aggression in a sample of patients with personality disorders and healthy controls
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Qiaoping Yuan, M. Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez, Laura Bevilacqua, Marianne Goodman, David Goldman, Shauna R. Weinstein, Larry J. Siever, Zhifeng Zhou, Harold W. Koenigsberg, Colin A. Hodgkinson, and Antonia S. New
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Suicide, Attempted ,Tryptophan Hydroxylase ,Impulsivity ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Article ,White People ,Sex Factors ,Gene Frequency ,Borderline Personality Disorder ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,mental disorders ,Ethnicity ,medicine ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Psychiatry ,Borderline personality disorder ,Biological Psychiatry ,Suicide attempt ,TPH2 ,Aggression ,Haplotype ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Personality disorders ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Haplotypes ,Anxiety ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
Background There is a decreased serotonergic function in impulsive aggression and borderline personality disorder (BPD), and genetic association studies suggest a role of serotonergic genes in impulsive aggression and BPD. Only one study has analyzed the association between the tryptophan-hydroxylase 2 (TPH2) gene and BPD. A TPH2 “risk” haplotype has been described that is associated with anxiety, depression and suicidal behavior. Methods We assessed the relationship between the previously identified “risk” haplotype at the TPH2 locus and BPD diagnosis, impulsive aggression, affective lability, and suicidal/parasuicidal behaviors, in a well-characterized clinical sample of 103 healthy controls (HCs) and 251 patients with personality disorders (109 with BPD). A logistic regression including measures of depression, affective lability and aggression scores in predicting “risk” haplotype was conducted. Results The prevalence of the “risk” haplotype was significantly higher in patients with BPD compared to HCs. Those with the “risk” haplotype have higher aggression and affect lability scores and more suicidal/parasuicidal behaviors than those without it. In the logistic regression model, affect lability was the only significant predictor and it correctly classified 83.1% of the subjects as “risk” or “non-risk” haplotype carriers. Conclusions We found an association between the previously described TPH2 “risk” haplotype and BPD diagnosis, affective lability, suicidal/parasuicidal behavior, and aggression scores.
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- 2010
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21. Increased Serotonin 2A Receptor Availability in the Orbitofrontal Cortex of Physically Aggressive Personality Disordered Patients
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Mark Slifstein, Marc Laruelle, Marianne Goodman, Larry J. Siever, W. Gordon Frankle, Xiaoyan Xu, Daniel R. Rosell, Shauna R. Weinstein, Anissa Abi-Dargham, Antonia S. New, and Judy L. Thompson
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Impulse control disorder ,Aggression ,medicine.disease ,Serotonergic ,Personality disorders ,Frontal lobe ,medicine ,Orbitofrontal cortex ,Serotonin ,medicine.symptom ,Intermittent explosive disorder ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Biological Psychiatry - Abstract
Background Impulsive physical aggression is a common and problematic feature of many personality disorders. The serotonergic system is known to be involved in the pathophysiology of aggression, and multiple lines of evidence have implicated the serotonin 2A receptor (5-HT 2A R). We sought to examine the role of the 5-HT 2A R in impulsive aggression specifically in the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), given that our own studies and an extensive literature indicate that serotonergic disturbances in the OFC are linked to aggression. We have previously hypothesized that increased 5-HT 2A R function in the OFC is a state phenomenon that promotes impulsive aggression. Methods Serotonin 2A receptor availability was measured with positron emission tomography and the selective 5-HT 2A R antagonist radioligand [ 11 C]MDL100907 in two groups of impulsively aggressive personality disordered patients—14 with current physical aggression, and 15 without current physical aggression—and 25 healthy control subjects. Clinical ratings of various symptom dimensions were also obtained. Results Orbitofrontal 5-HT 2A R availability was greater in patients with current physical aggression compared with patients without current physical aggression and healthy control subjects; no differences in OFC 5-HT 2A R availability were observed between patients without current physical aggression and healthy control subjects. No significant differences in 5-HT 2A R availability were observed in other brain regions examined. Among both groups of impulsively aggressive personality disordered patients combined, OFC 5-HT 2A R availability was correlated, specifically, with a state measure of impulsive aggression. Conclusions These findings are consistent with our previously described model in which impulsive aggression is related to dynamic changes in 5-HT 2A R function in the OFC.
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- 2010
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22. Neural correlates of using distancing to regulate emotional responses to social situations
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Larry J. Siever, Scott Pizzarello, Jin Fan, Antonia S. New, Harold W. Koenigsberg, Marianne Goodman, Kevin N. Ochsner, Janine D. Flory, Lucia Tecuta, Kevin G. Guise, Xun Liu, Christine Dorantes, Stephanie Guerreri, Harold W. Koenigsberg, Jin Fan, Kevin N. Ochsner, Xun Liu, Kevin Guise, Scott Pizzarello, Christine Dorante, Lucia Tecuta, Stephanie Guerreri, Marianne Goodman, Antonia New, Janine Flory, and Larry J. Siever
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,cognitive reappraisal ,Distancing ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Emotions ,Precuneus ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Amygdala ,Article ,Cognitive reappraisal ,Young Adult ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,EMOTION ,medicine ,Humans ,Prefrontal cortex ,FUNCTIONAL MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING (FMRI) ,Brain Mapping ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Distance Perception ,Emotion regulation ,Brain ,Middle Aged ,Social cue ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Oxygen ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Social Perception ,Posterior cingulate ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Psychology ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Photic Stimulation ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Cognitive reappraisal is a commonly used and highly adaptive strategy for emotion regulation that has been studied in healthy volunteers. Most studies to date have focused on forms of reappraisal that involve reinterpreting the meaning of stimuli and have intermixed social and non-social emotional stimuli. Here we examined the neural correlates of the regulation of negative emotion elicited by social situations using a less studied form of reappraisal known as distancing. Whole brain fMRI data were obtained as participants viewed aversive and neutral social scenes with instructions to either simply look at and respond naturally to the images or to downregulate their emotional responses by distancing. Three key findings were obtained accompanied with the reduced aversive response behaviorally. First, across both instruction types, aversive social images activated the amygdala. Second, across both image types, distancing activated the precuneus and posterior cingulate cortex (PCC), intraparietal sulci (IPS), and middle/superior temporal gyrus (M/STG). Third, when distancing one's self from aversive images, activity increased in dorsal anterior cingulate (dACC), medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), lateral prefrontal cortex, precuneus and PCC, IPS, and M/STG, meanwhile, and decreased in the amygdala. These findings demonstrate that distancing from aversive social cues modulates amygdala activity via engagement of networks implicated in social perception, perspective-taking, and attentional allocation.
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- 2010
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23. Laboratory Induced Aggression: A Positron Emission Tomography Study of Aggressive Individuals with Borderline Personality Disorder
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Randall E. Newmark, Sophie A. Lazarus, Erin A. Hazlett, Joseph Triebwasser, Larry J. Siever, Roanna Trisdorfer, Antonia S. New, Marianne Goodman, Monte S. Buchsbaum, Kim E. Goldstein, David A. Meyerson, Janine D. Flory, Jane Zhang, and Harold W. Koenigsberg
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Aggression ,Provocation test ,Poison control ,Audiology ,medicine.disease ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Amygdala ,Brain mapping ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neuroimaging ,mental disorders ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Psychiatry ,Intermittent explosive disorder ,Psychology ,Borderline personality disorder ,Biological Psychiatry - Abstract
Background Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is often associated with symptoms of impulsive aggression, which poses a threat to patients themselves and to others. Preclinical studies show that orbital frontal cortex (OFC) plays a role in regulating impulsive aggression. Prior work has found OFC dysfunction in BPD. Methods We employed a task to provoke aggressive behavior, the Point Subtraction Aggression Paradigm (PSAP), which has never previously been used during functional brain imaging. Thirty-eight BPD patients with intermittent explosive disorder (BPD-IED) and 36 age-matched healthy control subjects (HCs) received 18fluoro-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography (18FDG-PET) on two occasions with a provocation and nonprovocation version of the PSAP. Mean relative glucose metabolism was measured throughout the cortex, and difference scores (provoked − nonprovoked) were calculated. A whole brain exploratory analysis for the double difference of BPD-IED − HC for provoked − nonprovoked was also conducted. Results BPD-IED patients were significantly more aggressive than HCs on the PSAP. BPD-IED patients also increased relative glucose metabolic rate (rGMR) in OFC and amygdala when provoked, while HCs decreased rGMR in these areas. However, HCs increased rGMR in anterior, medial, and dorsolateral prefrontal regions during provocation more than BPD-IED patients. Conclusions Patients responded aggressively and showed heightened rGMR in emotional brain areas, including amygdala and OFC, in response to provocation but not in more dorsal brain regions associated with cognitive control of aggression. In contrast, HCs increased rGMR in dorsal regions of PFC during aggression provocation, brain regions involved in top-down cognitive control of aggression, and, more broadly, of emotion.
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- 2009
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24. Evaluation of behavioral impulsivity and aggression tasks as endophenotypes for borderline personality disorder
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Larry J. Siever, Emil F. Coccaro, Antonia S. New, Marianne Goodman, Michael McCloskey, Janine D. Flory, and Harold W. Koenigsberg
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Aggression ,Cluster B personality disorders ,Poison control ,Cognition ,medicine.disease ,Impulsivity ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Article ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Endophenotype ,mental disorders ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Psychiatry ,Borderline personality disorder ,Biological Psychiatry - Abstract
Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is marked by aggression and impulsive, often self-destructive behavior. Despite the severe risks associated with BPD, relatively little is known about the disorder's eti- ology. Identification of genetic correlates (endophenotypes) of BPD would improve the prospects of tar- geted interventions for more homogeneous subsets of borderline patients characterized by specific genetic vulnerabilities. The current study evaluated behavioral measures of aggression and impulsivity as potential endophenotypes for BPD. Subjects with BPD (N = 127), a non cluster B personality disorder (OPD N = 122), or healthy volunteers (HV N = 112) completed self report and behavioral measures of aggression, motor impulsivity and cognitive impulsivity. Results showed that BPD subjects demonstrated more aggression and motor impulsivity than HV (but not OPD) subjects on behavioral tasks. In contrast, BPD subjects self-reported more impulsivity and aggression than either comparison group. Subsequent analyses showed that among BPD subjects behavioral aggression was associated with self-reported aggression, while behavioral and self-report impulsivity measures were more modestly associated. Over- all, the results provide partial support for the use of behavioral measures of aggression and motor impul- sivity as endophenotypes for BPD, with stronger support for behavioral aggression measures as an endophenotype for aggression within BPD samples.
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- 2009
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25. Childhood trauma and basal cortisol in people with personality disorders
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Antonia S. New, Rachel Yehuda, Larry J. Siever, Vivian Mitropoulou, Janine D. Flory, and Robert G. Grossman
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Adult ,Male ,Child abuse ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hydrocortisone ,lcsh:RC435-571 ,Victimology ,Poison control ,Personality Disorders ,Severity of Illness Index ,Article ,Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,lcsh:Psychiatry ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Humans ,Child Abuse ,Child ,Psychological abuse ,Psychiatry ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,medicine.disease ,Personality disorders ,Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Physical abuse ,Sexual abuse ,Female ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
This study examined the influence of various forms of childhood abuse on basal cortisol levels in a sample of adults with Axis II personality disorders. Participants included 63 adults (n = 19 women) who provided basal plasma cortisol samples and completed the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire. Linear regression analyses that included all 5 subscales (ie, sexual abuse, physical abuse, emotional abuse, physical neglect and emotional neglect) demonstrated that physical abuse was related to lower cortisol levels (beta = -.43, P = .007), consistent with prior literature. In contrast, physical neglect was associated with higher cortisol (beta = .36, P = .02), after controlling for other forms of abuse. Results are consistent with the view that childhood trauma has long-lasting neurobiological effects and suggest that different forms of trauma may have distinct biological effects.
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- 2009
26. Frontolimbic structural changes in borderline personality disorder
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Larry J. Siever, Antonia S. New, Cheuk Y. Tang, Michael J. Minzenberg, and Jin Fan
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Adult ,Male ,Cingulate cortex ,Gyrus Cinguli ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Amygdala ,Article ,Limbic system ,Borderline Personality Disorder ,Basal ganglia ,Limbic System ,medicine ,Humans ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Borderline personality disorder ,Biological Psychiatry ,Anterior cingulate cortex ,Voxel-based morphometry ,medicine.disease ,Frontal Lobe ,Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Frontal lobe ,Female ,sense organs ,Atrophy ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
Frontolimbic dysfunction is observed in borderline personality disorder (BPD), with responses to emotional stimuli that are exaggerated in the amygdala and impaired in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC). This pattern of altered function is consistent with animal models of stress responses and depression, where hypertrophic changes in the amygdala and atrophic changes in the ACC are observed. We tested the hypothesis that BPD patients exhibit gross structural changes that parallel the respective increases in amygdala activation and impairment of rostral/subgenual ACC activation.Twelve unmedicated outpatients with BPD by DSM-IV and 12 normal control (NC) subjects underwent a high-resolution T1-weighted structural MRI scan. Relative gray matter concentration (GMC) in spatially-normalized images was evaluated by standard voxel-based morphometry, with voxel-wise subject group comparisons by t test constrained to amygdala and rostral/subgenual ACC.The BPD group was significantly higher than NC in GMC in the amygdala. In contrast, the BPD group showed significantly lower GMC than the NC group in left rostral/subgenual ACC.This sample of BPD patients exhibits gross structural changes in gray matter in cortical and subcortical limbic regions that parallel the regional distribution of altered functional activation to emotional stimuli among these same subjects. While the histological basis for GMC changes in adult clinical populations is poorly-known at present, the observed pattern is consistent with the direction of change, in animal models of anxiety and depression, of neuronal number and/or morphological complexity in both the amygdala (where it is increased) and ACC (where it is decreased).
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- 2008
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27. Cortical gray and white matter volume in unmedicated schizotypal and schizophrenia patients
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Yuliya Torosjan, Jennifer N. Lo, Antonia S. New, Larry J. Siever, M. Mehmet Haznedar, Yuliya Zelmanova, Randall E. Newmark, Monte S. Buchsbaum, Cathryn F. Glanton, Erin A. Hazlett, Vivian Mitropoulou, and Kim E. Goldstein
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Adult ,Male ,Cingulate cortex ,Psychosis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Grey matter ,Audiology ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Article ,Temporal lobe ,White matter ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Biological Psychiatry ,Aged ,Cerebral Cortex ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Temporal cortex ,Brain Mapping ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Schizotypal personality disorder ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Frontal lobe ,Multivariate Analysis ,Schizophrenia ,Female ,Psychology ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies have revealed fronto-temporal cortical gray matter volume reductions in schizophrenia. However, to date studies have not examined whether age- and sex-matched unmedicated schizotypal personality disorder (SPD) patients share some or all of the structural brain-imaging characteristics of schizophrenia patients. We examined cortical gray/white matter volumes in a large sample of unmedicated schizophrenia-spectrum patients (n = 79 SPD, n = 57 schizophrenia) and 148 healthy controls. MRI images were reoriented to standard position parallel to the anterior–posterior commissure line, segmented into gray and white matter tissue types, and assigned to Brodmann areas (BAs) using a postmortem-histological atlas. Group differences in regional volume of gray and white matter in the BAs were examined with MANOVA. Schizophrenia patients had significantly reduced gray matter volume widely across the cortex but more marked in frontal and temporal lobes. SPD patients had reductions in the same regions but only about half that observed in schizophrenia and sparing in key regions including BA10. In schizophrenia, greater fronto-temporal volume loss was associated with greater negative symptom severity and in SPD, greater interpersonal and cognitive impairment. Overall, our findings suggest that increased prefrontal volume in BA10 and sparing of volume loss in temporal cortex (BAs 22 and 20) may be a protective factor in SPD which reduces vulnerability to psychosis.
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- 2008
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28. Biological Underpinnings of Borderline Personality Disorder
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Marianne Goodman, Antonia S. New, and Joseph Triebwasser
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medicine.diagnostic_test ,Brain activity and meditation ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Impulsivity ,medicine.disease ,Developmental psychology ,Neuroimaging ,Functional neuroimaging ,Positron emission tomography ,medicine ,Personality ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Borderline personality disorder ,Neuroscience ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common - Abstract
SUMMARY Biological understanding of a personality disorder is best achieved by examining the disorder's component dimensions, which for borderline personality disorder include impulsive aggression and affective instability. Current biological research into BPD aims to identify the neurotransmitters and brain regions implicated in each of these key domains. Because of advancing technologies and analytic strategies, structural and functional neuroimaging are at the forefront of such efforts. Structural neuroimaging, primarily in the form of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans, gives information about the anatomy of the brain, while functional neuroimaging, primarily functional MRI (fMRI) and positron emission tomography (PET) scans, gives information about brain activity and neurotransmitter systems at the molecular level. BPD neuroimaging studies to date have implied the involvement of several neurotransmitter systems, principally serotonin, along with dysfunction of select brain regions, including the ...
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- 2008
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29. Exaggerated Affect-Modulated Startle During Unpleasant Stimuli in Borderline Personality Disorder
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Jonathan K. Wynn, Michael J. Minzenberg, Michelle J. Romero, Lisa J. Speiser, William C. Williams, Marianne Goodman, Erin A. Hazlett, Antonia S. New, Larry J. Siever, Marcela Roy, and Michael Carrizal
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Adult ,Male ,Reflex, Startle ,Startle response ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Generalized anxiety disorder ,Word Association Tests ,Audiology ,Affect (psychology) ,Severity of Illness Index ,Developmental psychology ,Borderline Personality Disorder ,Reference Values ,Severity of illness ,Psychophysics ,medicine ,Humans ,Borderline personality disorder ,Biological Psychiatry ,Analysis of Variance ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Case-control study ,medicine.disease ,Affect ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Case-Control Studies ,Female ,Analysis of variance ,Abnormality ,Arousal ,Psychology - Abstract
Background Excessive emotional responding is considered to be a hallmark of borderline personality disorder (BPD). The affect-modulated startle response is a reliable indicator of emotional processing of stimuli. The aim of this study was to examine emotional processing in BPD patients (n = 27) and healthy control subjects (n = 21). Methods Participants viewed an intermixed series of unpleasant, borderline-salient (e.g., “hate”), and neutral (e.g., “view”) words and were instructed to think about the meaning of the word for them personally while eyeblink responses were assessed. Results The BPD patients exhibited larger startle eyeblink during unpleasant but not neutral words, indicating exaggerated physiological affect. This finding remained significant when we controlled for comorbid diagnoses, including generalized anxiety disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder. Greater symptom severity was associated with greater affective-startle difference scores (unpleasant-neutral). Conclusions Consistent with the symptom of affective dysregulation, these results suggest an abnormality in the processing of unpleasant emotional stimuli by BPD patients.
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- 2007
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30. Amygdala–Prefrontal Disconnection in Borderline Personality Disorder
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Janine D. Flory, Monte S. Buchsbaum, Erin A. Hazlett, Roanna Trisdorfer, Serge A. Mitelman, Larry J. Siever, Marianne Goodman, Randall E. Newmark, M. Mehmet Haznedar, Antonia S. New, and Harold W. Koenigsberg
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Adult ,Male ,Emotions ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Poison control ,Placebo ,Amygdala ,Piperazines ,Borderline Personality Disorder ,Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Neural Pathways ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Prefrontal cortex ,Borderline personality disorder ,Pharmacology ,Fluorodeoxyglucose ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Serotonin Receptor Agonists ,Aggression ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Glucose ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Positron emission tomography ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Impulsive Behavior ,Female ,Disconnection ,Atrophy ,Energy Metabolism ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,psychological phenomena and processes ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Abnormal fronto-amygdala circuitry has been implicated in impulsive aggression, a core symptom of borderline personality disorder (BPD). We examined relative glucose metabolic rate (rGMR) at rest and after m-CPP (meta-chloropiperazine) with (18)fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) with positron emission tomography (PET) in 26 impulsive aggressive (IED)-BPD patients and 24 controls. Brain edges/amygdala were visually traced on MRI scans co-registered to PET scans; rGMR was obtained for ventral and dorsal regions of the amygdala and Brodmann areas within the prefrontal cortex (PFC). Correlation coefficients were calculated between rGMR for dorsal/ventral amygdala regions and PFC. Additionally, amygdala volumes and rGMR were examined in BPD and controls. Correlations PFC/amygdala Placebo: Controls showed significant positive correlations between right orbitofrontal (OFC) and ventral, but not dorsal, amygdala. Patients showed only weak correlations between amygdala and the anterior PFC, with no distinction between dorsal and ventral amygdala. Correlations PFC/amygdala: m-CPP response: Controls showed positive correlations between OFC and amygdala regions, whereas patients showed positive correlations between dorsolateral PFC and amygdala. Group differences between interregional correlational matrices were highly significant. Amygdala volume/metabolism: No group differences were found for amygdala volume, or metabolism in the placebo condition or in response to meta-chloropiperazine (m-CPP). We demonstrated a tight coupling of metabolic activity between right OFC and ventral amygdala in healthy subjects with dorsoventral differences in amygdala circuitry, not present in IED-BPD. We demonstrated no significant differences in amygdala volumes or metabolism between BPD patients and controls.
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- 2007
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31. Amphetamine, psychosis, and cognition in the schizophrenia spectrum
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Larry J. Siever, Antonia S. New, Philip D. Harvey, Vivian Mitropoulou, Jeremy M. Silverman, and Elisabeth G. Iskander
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Psychosis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Working memory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Cognition ,medicine.disease ,Schizotypal personality disorder ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Schizoid personality disorder ,Schizophrenia ,medicine ,Personality ,Pshychiatric Mental Health ,Psychology ,Psychiatry ,Amphetamine ,Clinical psychology ,media_common ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We previously reported that subjects with a schizophrenia spectrum personality disorder (ie, an odd cluster personality disorder), of which the prototype is schizotypal personality disorder, show cognitive impairment in circumscribed areas (working memory) compared with healthy control subjects, and that amphetamine administration improves working memory in subjects with schizotypal personality disorder. In this larger series, we wanted to determine whether amphetamine treatment ameliorates working memory impairment using three groups: subjects with a schizophrenia spectrum personality disorder (ie, schizotypal, paranoid, or schizoid personality disorder), other (subjects with nonschizophrenia spectrum) personality disorder, and healthy volunteers. We hypothesized that amphetamine treatment would improve cognitive function in domains in which subjects with schizophrenia spectrum personality disorder show impairment compared with healthy volunteers and the other personality disorder group. Overall, amphetamine treatment did not improve performance in any task compared with placebo, and there was no group by drug interaction in the total sample. However, when the sample was restricted to the subjects who showed impairment at baseline, amphetamine treatment improved visuospatial working memory. In the total patient sample, amphetamine treatment reduced negative symptoms, whereas positive symptoms remained unchanged. Amphetamine treatment improves working memory in those subjects with cognitive impairment at baseline, most of whom meet criteria for a schizophrenia spectrum disorder.
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- 2005
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32. Functional MRI of visuospatial working memory in schizotypal personality disorder: a region-of-interest analysis
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Jason S. Schneiderman, Larry J. Siever, Marianne Goodman, Harold W. Koenigsberg, Antonia S. New, Bradley R. Buchsbaum, Monte S. Buchsbaum, and Cheuk Y. Tang
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Adult ,Male ,Posterior parietal cortex ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Schizotypal Personality Disorder ,Premotor cortex ,Visual memory ,Gyrus ,Memory ,Cortex (anatomy) ,Task Performance and Analysis ,medicine ,Humans ,Prefrontal cortex ,Applied Psychology ,Working memory ,Middle Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Frontal Lobe ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Superior frontal gyrus ,Case-Control Studies ,Space Perception ,Imagination ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Psychology ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Background. Functional MRI studies have begun to identify neural networks implicated in visuospatial working memory in healthy volunteers and patients with schizophrenia. The study of schizotypal personality disorder (SPD) provides regional analysis in unmedicated patients in the schizophrenia spectrum. Method. Unmedicated patients with SPD by DSM-IV criteria and normal controls were assessed with fMRI while performing a visuospatial working-memory task. It required the subjects to retain the location of three dots located on the circumference of an imaginary circle and then respond to a query display in which one dot was presented and the subject required to press a button to indicate whether the probe dot location was previously displayed. Subject groups did not differ significantly in spatial memory scores. The exact Talairach and Tournoux coordinates of brain areas previously reported to show activation with spatial memory tasks were assessed. Results. The majority of these locations showed BOLD response activation significantly less in patients during the memory retention period, including the left ventral prefrontal cortex, superior frontal gyrus, intraparietal cortex and posterior inferior gyrus. Regions in the right middle prefrontal and prestriate cortex showed greater activation at a trend level for patients with SPD than for normal controls. In addition, we replicated the findings of increased activation with the task in healthy volunteers in the premotor areas, ventral prefrontal cortex and parietal cortex. Conclusions. SPD patients show decreased activation compared to healthy volunteers in key frontal regions and we also provided a partial replication of findings reported in healthy subjects.
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- 2005
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33. Trauma, Genes, and the Neurobiology of Personality Disorders
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Antonia S. New, Marianne Goodman, and Larry J. Siever
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Adult ,Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Psychopathy ,Pituitary-Adrenal System ,Interpersonal communication ,Environment ,Nervous System ,Personality Disorders ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Neglect ,Developmental psychology ,Neurobiology ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Borderline Personality Disorder ,Perception ,medicine ,Humans ,Personality ,Child ,Borderline personality disorder ,media_common ,General Neuroscience ,Cognition ,medicine.disease ,Personality disorders ,Wounds and Injuries ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
A model for personality dysfunction posits an interaction between inherited susceptibility and environmental factors such as childhood trauma. Core biological vulnerabilities in personality include dimensions of affective instability, impulsive aggression, and cognition/perceptual domains. For the dimension of impulsive aggression, often seen in borderline personality disorder (BPD), the underlying neurobiology involves deficits in central serotonin function and alterations in specific brain regions in the cingulate and the medial and orbital prefrontal cortex. The role of trauma in the development of personality disorder and especially for BPD remains unclear. Although recent studies suggest that BPD is not a trauma-spectrum disorder and that it is biologically distinct from posttraumatic stress disorder, high rates of childhood abuse and neglect do exist for individuals with personality dysfunction. Personality symptom clusters seem to be unrelated to specific abuses, but they may relate to more enduring aspects of interpersonal and family environments in childhood. Whereas twin and family studies indicate a partially heritable basis for impulsive aggression, studies of serotonin-related genes to date suggest only modest contributions to behavior. Gene-environment interactions involving childhood maltreatment are demonstrated in recent studies on antisocial behaviors and aggressive rhesus monkeys and highlight the need for further research in this important area.
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- 2004
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34. Low prolactin response to fenfluramine in impulsive aggression
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Antonia S. New, Robert F. Trestman, Marianne Goodman, Harold H. Koenigsberg, Vivian Mitropoulou, Jeremy M. Silverman, and Larry J. Siever
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Fenfluramine ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Impulsive aggression ,Impulsivity ,Personality Disorders ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Personality ,Biological Psychiatry ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,media_common ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Personality disorders ,Prolactin ,Aggression ,Disruptive, Impulse Control, and Conduct Disorders ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Endocrinology ,Female ,Analysis of variance ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors ,medicine.drug - Abstract
To examine the prolactin (prl) response to d,l-fenfluramine in a large sample of personality disorder patients with impulsive aggression. Patients were screened from clinics at the Bronx VAMC and the Mount Sinai Medical Center and from press releases. One hundred and forty-six personality disorder patients (90M;56F) and 23 normal controls (15M;8F) underwent oral d,l-fenfluramine challenge. The peak change in prolactin(deltapkprl) was calculated by subtracting baseline prolactin from peak response following fenfluramine administration (3 h). Analysis of variance and regression analysis were used to detect group differences in deltapkprl. Deltapkprl in impulsive aggressive men, but not women, with personality disorders was blunted compared with controls. Men with suicide histories also had a blunted deltapkprl compared with those without, which was not accounted for by depression. This study represents a replication of previous studies, in a much larger sample, showing a blunted PRL response to fenfluramine of male patients with personality disorder in relation to impulsive aggression and to suicide attempts.
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- 2004
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35. Deficient Attentional Modulation of the Startle Response in Patients With Schizotypal Personality Disorder
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Larry J. Siever, Liza A. Maldari, Elizabeth M. Sevin, Antonia S. New, Jill Levine, Erin A. Hazlett, Jeremy M. Silverman, and Monte S. Buchsbaum
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Startle response ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Cognition ,Audiology ,medicine.disease ,Schizotypal personality disorder ,Developmental psychology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Schizophrenia ,Moro reflex ,Neuropsychologia ,medicine ,Abnormality ,Psychology ,Prepulse inhibition - Abstract
Objective: Attentional deficits have been identified as an abnormality that individuals with schizotypal personality disorder share with schizophrenia patients. The purpose of this study was to examine automatic sensorimotor gating and controlled attentional modulation of the startle eye blink response in unmedicated subjects with schizotypal personality disorder. Method: Eighteen unmedicated patients with schizotypal personality disorder and 16 healthy individuals were assessed in an acoustic attention-to-prepulse paradigm. The participants performed a selective attention task involving the presentation of attended, ignored, and novel tones that served as prepulse tones. Acoustic startle probes were presented at short and long lead intervals after the onset of tones and occasionally during the intertone interval. Results: The comparison subjects showed greater prepulse inhibition and prepulse facilitation during the attended than the ignored prepulses, demonstrating early and later attentional modulation of startle eye blink response. In contrast, the subjects with schizotypal personality disorder failed to show this pattern. Conclusions: Subjects with schizotypal personality disorder have deficits in controlled attentional processing, as indexed by modification of the startle eye blink response, that are similar to those observed in patients with schizophrenia.
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- 2003
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36. The Relationship Between Pathological Dissociation, Self-Injury and Childhood Trauma in Patients with Personality Disorders Using Taxometric Analyses
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Daniel S. Weiss, Jeremy M. Silverman, Antonia S. New, Harold W. Koenigsberg, Larry J. Siever, Marianne Goodman, and Vivian Mitropoulou Ma
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Dissociation (neuropsychology) ,medicine.drug_class ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Diagnostic interview ,Dissociative ,medicine.disease ,Personality disorders ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Rating scale ,medicine ,Personality ,In patient ,Psychiatry ,Psychology ,Pathological ,media_common ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Objective: Dissociative phenomena exist on a spectrum ranging from psychological absorption to highly symptomatic disruptions of identity and memory. A statistical methodology called taxometric analysis has established a set of indicators that identify patients who have pathological dissociation, a qualitatively different form of dissociative phenomena. Using taxometric methodology, this study examines the relationship of pathological dissociation to personality diagnosis and self-directed injury, including suicide and history of childhood abuse, in a sample of outpatients with personality disorders. Method: Patients were recruited from advertisements or referred from local clinicians. Participants completed a diagnostic interview and rating scales for dissociation, self-injury and childhood trauma. Pathological dissociation was identified using the Dissociative Experiences Scale-Taxon (DES-T; Waller, Putnam, & Carlson, 1996). Membership in the pathological dissociation taxon was established by c...
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- 2003
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37. Commentary on ‘Schizoid personality disorder-the peculiarities of their interpersonal relationships and existential roles’ by Nirestean, et al
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Antonia S. New
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Interpersonal relationship ,Psychotherapist ,Schizoid personality disorder ,Health Policy ,medicine ,Pshychiatric Mental Health ,medicine.disease ,Psychology ,Existentialism - Published
- 2012
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38. Characterizing Affective Instability in Borderline Personality Disorder
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Philip D. Harvey, Marianne Goodman, Harold W. Koenigsberg, Larry J. Siever, Vivian Mitropoulou, Antonia S. New, Frances Schopick, Jeremy M. Silverman, Michael Serby, and James Schmeidler
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Personality Inventory ,Psychometrics ,Comorbidity ,Affect (psychology) ,Personality Disorders ,Severity of Illness Index ,Emotional Instability ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Borderline Personality Disorder ,medicine ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,Borderline personality disorder ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Mood Disorders ,Reproducibility of Results ,medicine.disease ,Personality disorders ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Mood disorders ,Anxiety ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Personality Assessment Inventory ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
This study sought to understand affective instability among patients with borderline personality disorder by examining the degree of instability in six affective domains. The authors also examined the subjective intensity with which moods are experienced and the association between instability and intensity of affect.In a group of 152 patients with personality disorders, subjective affective intensity and six dimensions of affective instability were measured. The mean scores for lability and intensity for each affective domain for patients with borderline personality disorder were compared with those of patients with other personality disorders through analyses that controlled for other axis I affective disorders, age, and sex.Greater lability in terms of anger and anxiety and oscillation between depression and anxiety, but not in terms of oscillation between depression and elation, was associated with borderline personality disorder. Contrary to expectation, the experience of an increase in subjective affective intensity was not more prominent in patients with borderline personality disorder than in those with other personality disorders.By applying a finer-grained perspective on affective instability than those of previous personality disorder studies, this study points to patterns of affective experience characteristic of patients with borderline personality disorder.
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- 2002
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39. 887. Impact of Psychotic Symptom Profiles on Neurocognitive and Functional Outcomes in Bipolar Disorder
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Armando Cuesta-Diaz, Luz H. Ospina, Amanda Fisher, Megan Shanahan, Katherine E. Burdick, M. Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez, Manuela Russo, Erin A. Hazlett, Antonia S. New, Harold W. Koenigsberg, Margaret McNamara, and George C. Nitzburg
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Symptom profiles ,business.industry ,medicine ,Bipolar disorder ,Psychiatry ,business ,medicine.disease ,Neurocognitive ,Biological Psychiatry - Published
- 2017
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40. 800. Default Mode Network Abnormalities in Antipsychotic-Naïve Schizotypal Personality Disorder
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Edmund Wong, Caitlin Kelliher, Erin A. Hazlett, Philip R. Szeszko, Panos Roussos, Antonia S. New, Chi C. Chan, Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez, Daniel R. Rosell, Cheuk Y. Tang, Justin D. Penner, and Larry J. Siever
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Antipsychotic naive ,medicine ,medicine.disease ,Psychology ,Schizotypal personality disorder ,Biological Psychiatry ,Default mode network ,Clinical psychology - Published
- 2017
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41. Partial Success?
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Antonia S. New
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Health Policy ,Pshychiatric Mental Health ,Psychology ,Social psychology - Published
- 2011
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42. Are the Interpersonal and Identity Disturbances in the Borderline Personality Disorder Criteria Linked to the Traits of Affective Instability and Impulsivity?
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Antonia S. New, Vivian Mitropoulou, Michael Serby, Philip D. Harvey, Larry J. Siever, Jeremy M. Silverman, Frances Schopick, Harold W. Koenigsberg, and Marianne Goodman
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Adult ,Male ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Statistics as Topic ,Anger ,Personality Assessment ,Impulsivity ,Developmental psychology ,Identity Crisis ,Borderline Personality Disorder ,medicine ,Humans ,Personality ,Borderline personality disorder ,Defense Mechanisms ,media_common ,Mood Disorders ,Aggression ,Middle Aged ,Identity disturbance ,medicine.disease ,Personality disorders ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Impulsive Behavior ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Personality Assessment Inventory ,Psychology - Abstract
This study examines the degree to which two putative biologically influenced personality traits, affective instability and impulsive aggression, are associated with some of the interpersonal and intrapsychic disturbances of borderline personality disorder (BPD) and with choice of defense mechanism. In a sample of 152 personality disorder patients, affective instability and impulsive aggression were measured. Defense mechanisms were assessed in 140 of these patients using the Defensive Style Questionnaire (DSQ). The correlations between the traits of affective instability and impulsive aggression and the eight DSM-III-R criteria for borderline personality disorder and 20 DSQ defenses were examined. Affective instability was significantly correlated with the DSM-III-R criteria of identity disturbance, chronic emptiness or boredom, inappropriate anger, suicidality, and the affective instability criteria. It also was associated with the defenses of splitting, projection, acting out, passive aggression, undoing, and autistic fantasy. Impulsive aggression was related to unstable interpersonal relationships, inappropriate anger and impulsiveness and with the defense of acting out. It was negatively correlated with the defenses of suppression and reaction formation. A number of the interpersonal and experiential disturbances and defense mechanisms that are features of BPD are associated with the traits of affective instability and impulsive aggression among patients with personality disorders.
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- 2001
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43. The Effects of Risperidone on the Cognitive Performance of Individuals With Schizotypal Personality Disorder
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Philip D. Harvey, Margaret M. McClure, Antonia S. New, Jeremy M. Silverman, Larry J. Siever, Diedre Reynolds, Harold W. Koenigsberg, Robert L. Trestman, and Marianne Goodman
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Patient Dropouts ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,Treatment outcome ,Schizoid Personality Disorder ,Severity of Illness Index ,Article ,Young Adult ,Cognition ,Schizoid personality disorder ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance ,Psychiatry ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Risperidone ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Schizotypal personality disorder ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Treatment Outcome ,Psychiatric status rating scales ,Female ,New York City ,Cognition Disorders ,Psychology ,Antipsychotic Agents ,Clinical psychology ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2009
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44. Irritable assault and variation in the COMT gene
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Janine D. Flory, Antonia S. New, Thembi Finch, David Goldman, Ke Xu, and Larry J. Siever
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Genotype ,Poison control ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Hostility ,Violence ,Catechol O-Methyltransferase ,Personality Disorders ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Polymorphism (computer science) ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Allele ,Psychiatry ,Biological Psychiatry ,Genetics (clinical) ,DNA Primers ,Aggression ,Genetic Variation ,medicine.disease ,Comorbidity ,Personality disorders ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Aggression is associated with the 'low' activity allele (Met) of the functional Val158Met polymorphism among people with schizophrenia spectrum disorders relative to the 'high' activity (Val) allele. We examined this polymorphism in a sample of 112 people with axis II personality disorders. Participants completed the Buss Durkee Hostility Inventory. Two single nucleotide polymorphisms in the COMT gene were genotyped in these participants classified as 'white' according to US Census Bureau definitions. We failed to observe an association between the Val158Met allele and aggression but observed an association between self-reported aggression and the G allele of a biallelic polymorphism located in the 3'' UTR (rs16559). This allele is less prevalent among schizophrenics and is associated with lower COMT expression in the brain. These findings provide limited support for a role of COMT in modulating aggressive behavior, and are extended to people with personality disorders. Language: en
- Published
- 2007
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45. Dr. Koenigsberg and Colleagues Reply
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Antonia S. New, Larry J. Siever, Philip D. Harvey, Marianne Goodman, Vivian Mitropoulou, and Harold W. Koenigsberg
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Psychiatry and Mental health - Published
- 2003
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46. Striatal Size and Relative Glucose Metabolic Rate in Schizotypal Personality Disorder and Schizophrenia
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Erin A. Hazlett, Adam M. Brickman, Jeremy M. Silverman, Michael B Fleischman, Larry J. Siever, Lina Shihabuddin, Vivian Mitropoulou, Melissa Nunn, Monte S. Buchsbaum, Cheuk Y. Tang, and Antonia S. New
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychosis ,Caudate nucleus ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Schizotypal Personality Disorder ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 ,Internal medicine ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,Fluorodeoxyglucose ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Putamen ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Schizotypal personality disorder ,Corpus Striatum ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Glucose ,Endocrinology ,Schizophrenia ,Positron emission tomography ,Female ,Schizophrenic Psychology ,Caudate Nucleus ,Psychology ,Tomography, Emission-Computed ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Schizotypal personality disorder (SPD) shares social deficits and cognitive impairment with schizophrenia, but is not typically characterized by frank psychosis. Because striatal size and functional activity have both been shown to be associated with psychotic symptoms, we carried out the first study of SPD to assess the caudate and putamen for comparison with findings in schizophrenia. Methods Patients with SPD (n = 16), schizophrenic patients (n = 42), and age- and sex-matched normal control subjects (n = 47) were assessed with magnetic resonance imaging. All of the patients with SPD and subsamples of the schizophrenic patients (n = 27) and control subjects (n = 32) were also assessed with positron emission tomography using fluorodeoxyglucose F-18. Results The relative size of the putamen in controls was significantly larger than in patients with SPD and significantly smaller than in schizophrenic patients, while the relative size of the caudate was similar in all 3 groups. Compared with control values, relative glucose metabolic rate in the ventral putamen was significantly elevated in patients with SPD and reduced in schizophrenic patients. When subsamples of schizophrenic patients (n = 10) and patients with SPD (n = 10) both of whom never received medication were compared, this pattern was more marked, with the highest value for the putamen being found in patients with SPD for the ventral slice and the lowest value for the right dorsal putamen. Conclusions Patients with SPD showed reduced volume and elevated relative glucose metabolic rate of the putamen compared with both schizophrenic patients and controls. These alterations in volume and activity may be related to the sparing of patients with SPD from frank psychosis.
- Published
- 2001
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