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The purpose of this study is to investigate how emotional and non-emotional regulation processes differ in EIP patients (with different levels of ADHD symptoms/ADHD-comorbidity) compared to controls. The investigators will test these participants' abilities to regulate emotional and non-emotional processes, reward anticipation and reward receipt while they undergo functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The participants' motor inhibition capacity on a behavioral level will also be investigated.
The hypothesis is that EIP patients will present with more deficits in emotion regulation processes compared to controls, even when controlling for ADHD symptoms. It is also hypothesized that higher levels of ADHD symptoms will correlate with dysfunctional non-emotional regulation processes, on a behavioral as well as brain mechanistic level.
Full description
Background: Comorbidity of Emotional Instability Personality Disorder (EIP) and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is common, and the two patient groups partially exhibit similar problems. The main hypothesis is that the two disorders are mechanistically related. The investigators believe that the mechanisms underlying the problems are linked to two parallel regulating systems in the brain. Here, prefrontal and anterior cingulate systems are in focus. The first system - including the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) and the caudal anterior cingulate cortex (cACC) - regulates non-emotional (and exteroceptive) information. The other system - including the lateral orbitofrontal prefrontal cortex (lObfc) and rostral anterior cingulate cortex (rACC) - regulates emotional (and interoceptive) information. The hypothesis is that the non-emotional/exteroceptive regulatory system is more affected in ADHD, while the emotional/interoceptive regulatory system is more affected in EIP.
Aims: The aim of this study is to differentiate between dysfunctional emotional regulation processes related to emotional instability symptoms (when controlling for non-emotional ADHD-like symptoms), and dysfunctional non-emotional regulation processes related to ADHD symptoms (when controlling for emotional instability symptoms).
Procedure:
Behavioral task: Stop Signal Task: measures participant's ability to inhibit a motor response. Outcome measures are Stop Signal Reaction Time (SSRT) and Go Reaction Time (GoRT)
fMRI task 1: Stroop task. Divided into 2 sessions of 10 minutes with 2 blocks in each. There are two types of blocks: Emotional Stroop task blocks (happy or fearful faces, with the word "HAPPY" or "FEAR" written across them) and Neutral Stroop task blocks (neutral faces of men and women with the word "MAN" or "WOMAN" written across them). Every other block is Emotional and every other is Neutral (balanced order between participants) so that each participant performs two emotional blocks and two neutral blocks. The task is to decide what emotion or gender is shown in the picture and ignore the word. Responses are made using a button box and reaction time is recorded for all the trials. Blood Oxygen Level Dependent (BOLD) signal is recorded in the brain during the task. Outcome measures are reaction times for the different trial types (incongruent(I) and congruent(C), also order dependent) as well as BOLD signal during these different types of trial.
fMRI task 2: Monetary Incentive Delay task (MID). Divided into 2 session of 10 minutes. Reward task in which the participant may win money (0 Swedish kronor (SEK), 10 SEK or 50 SEK in each trial). There is an anticipation phase in each trial, a response cue during which the participant needs to press a button as fast as she can, and an outcome phase in which feedback is presented of whether the participant has won the anticipated money or not. Outcome measures are BOLD activation during the anticipation phases of different levels of reward, and BOLD activation during the receipt/outcome phase of the different levels of reward. Reaction times for the different reward levels are also recorded.
The overall step-by-step procedure for each participant:
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Inclusion criteria
Additional inclusion criteria EIP patients:
≥4/9 criteria of DSM-IV, measured by SCID-II interview
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60 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Predrag Petrovic
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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