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Repeat neurobehavioral study of borderline...
Journal article

Repeat neurobehavioral study of borderline personality disorder.

Abstract

Previous research has tentatively identified a large subgroup of patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD) with histories of developmental or acquired brain insults. Similarly, these studies have demonstrated a possible biological correlation between the severity of BPD and the number of previous brain insults. The possibility of frontal system cognitive dysfunction in BPD has been raised. This single-blind, case-control study of BPD showed that 13 of 24 subjects with BPD had suffered a brain insult. Correlations between neurodevelopmental/acquired brain injury score and the diagnostic interview for borderline (DIB) score (r = 0.47), and between frontal system cognitive functioning and DIB score (r = -0.37) were seen. Neurocognitive testing and comparison with a cohort of subjects with traumatic brain injury (TBI) showed a pattern of similar cognitive functioning between the 2 groups, with the only differences on individual tests being in the direction of worse functioning in the group with BPD on 2 tasks. These results support the hypotheses described above. The main limitation reflects the low numbers of subjects.

Authors

van Reekum R; Links PS; Finlayson MA; Boyle M; Boiago I; Ostrander LA; Moustacalis E

Journal

Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience, Vol. 21, No. 1, pp. 13–20

Publication Date

December 1, 1996

ISSN

1180-4882

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