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Individuals with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) experience intensive, instable negative emotions. Hyperactivity of the amygdala is assumed to drive exaggerated emotional responses in BPD. Neurofeedback is an endogenous neuromodulation method to address the imbalance of neural circuits. Downregulation of amygdala hyperactivation with neurofeedback may ameliorate dysregulated emotions in BPD. The BrainSTEADy trial is designed to determine whether amygdala-fMRI-BOLD neurofeedback has a specific effect on affect instability in BPD beyond nonspecific benefit.
Full description
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is characterized by self-mutilation, suicidality, and severe interpersonal disturbances. These symptoms reflect pervasive emotion regulation problems. On the neural level, BPD patients show an inflated amygdala response to emotional cues. In addition, they have reduced neural control of the amygdala. The amygdala controls emotional experience and behavior. Therefore, current psychobiological theories consider amygdala hyper-activity a causal mechanism for emotional overreaction in BPD.
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) allows the recording of activation in subcortical brain regions, such as the amygdala, in real time. Live feedback from brain activation (e.g. via a thermometer with the temperature reflecting the degree of activation) allows one to learn the voluntary control of the brain. Dubbed "neurofeedback" (NF), the method can result in long-lasting changes in neural activation patterns. NF allows precise targeting of dysfunctional neuro-circuitries that relate to clinical symptoms.
The project proposed here investigates the clinical effectivity of fMRI-based amygdala-NF training in BPD. In total, 164 patients will participate in four training sessions provided by four study centers: Tuebingen, Freiburg, Giessen, and Mannheim. The training aims to reduce affective instability in everyday life, which is assessed primarily by ambulatory assessment before and after treatment. During NF sessions, patients receive feedback from the BOLD (Blood Oxygenation Level Dependent) signal recorded in the amygdala while they view pictures with negative emotional content. The amygdala responds to these pictures with an activation increase. The patient observes the amygdala responding, illustrated via increased temperature in a thermometer beside the picture. The task is to decrease temperature. The procedure should teach patients to master overreaction at an early stage of neural emotion processing.
To assess the effectivity of amygdala-NF, a control group receives non-veridical feedback from a different patient. The investigators expect a significant reduction in affective instability with amygdala-NF. In addition, the investigators expect a greater reduction in affective instability in the amygdala-NF group versus the control group.
The trial will go through two stages of recruitment. Stage 1 is reached after recruitment of 82 participants. An interim analysis will be conducted. Depending on the results of the interim analysis, the trial will enter stage 2, ie. recruitment of the full number of planned participants.
Results from this study enable assessment of clinical efficacy of amygdala-NF. In the future, NF could serve as a precise tool for person-centered treatment of affective instability symptoms in mental disorders with severe emotion regulation problems such as BPD.
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Stage 1: 82 patients, stage 2: 82 patients Inclusion Criteria
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164 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Christian Paret-Voigt, Dr.; Miroslava Hofmanová
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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