Title: Neuroanatomy of Personality Disorders
1Neuroanatomy of Personality Disorders
- Schizotypal PD, Violent/Aggressive PD, Antisocial
PD, Borderline PD
2(No Transcript)
3Examining the Brain
- Tomography (CT)
- generation of 3D image, IDs gross features
- Resonance Imaging (MRI, fMRI)
- determines which brain areas are active through H
spin and blood oxygen concentrations - Tomography (PET/SPECT)
- radioactive particles identify which brain areas
are active through blood oxygen concentrations
4Schizotypal PD (SPD)
- Symptoms of interest
- Hallucinations/delusions
- Thought and language disorder
- Areas of Interest
- Temporal Lobe
- Corpus Callosum
5SPD Areas of Interest
- 1) Temporal Lobe
- a) Global measure (Siever et al., 2002)
- abnormalities in both SPD and schizophrenics
versus controls (Cs) - decreased grey matter volume in the whole
temporal lobe - Audition, information processing
- could explain some learning impairments seen in
these disorders (p.163 Siever et al., 2002)
6Continued...
- 1) Temporal Lobe
- b)Temporal Gyrus (Dickey et al., 2002)
- temporal pole sensory-limbic integration
- planum temporale phonemic processing
- Heschls gyrus processing pure tones from MGN
(medial geniculate nucleus) of thalamus - found reduced grey matter in all three areas,
more specifically in Heschls gyrus - auditory hallucinations and thought disorder?
7(Dickey et al., 2002)
8Continued...
- 2) Corpus Callosum (Downhill Jr. et al., 2000)
- a) Posterior CC (splenium)
- transfer of sensory processes
- more temporal lobe (little parietal too)
- b) Anterior CC (genu)
- transfer of cognitive processes
- more frontal lobe
9Corpus Callosum(Downhill Jr. et al., 2000)
- 70 Ps13 SPD 27 people with schizophrenia 30
healthy Cs - traced divided ROI (region of interest)
10Corpus Callosum continued(Downhill Jr. et al.,
2000)
11Corpus Callosum continued(Downhill Jr. et al.,
2000)
- Splenium/posterior CC (more sensory)
- Cs gt SPD gt people with schizophrenia
- interhemispheric communication re sensory
processes deficient, but more pronounced in
those with schizophrenia? - verbalthoughts could be perceived as not part
of the self if the right and left hemispheres did
not have full communication (p 205) - delusions/auditory hallucinations?
-
- Genu/anterior CC (more cognitive)
- SPD gt Cs gt people with schizophrenia
- lesser cognitive deficit in SPD than in those
with schizophrenia - but did not discuss any thoughts on why they
found that SPDgtCs
12Violent and Aggressive PDAntisocial PDAreas of
Interest and Symptoms of Interest
- Frontal Lobe Orbitofrontal Cortex (OF)
- poor impulse control
- explosive, aggressive outbursts
- lack of interpersonal sensitivity
- Frontal Lobe Ventromedial (vm) Prefrontal
- judgment, awareness of socially appropriate
conduct, assessing consequences
13Neuroanatomical Research
- Frontal Lobe Abnormalities
- Raine et al., 2000
- 21 APD, 24 healthy Cs, 26 substance dependent, 21
psychiatric - structural imaging (MRI)
- APD PF grey 11.0 lt controls
- Frontal Lobe Abnormalities
- 333 prisoners, displayed habitual physical
aggression/explosive rages - 56.9 EEG abnormalities (62.2 frontal)
- 11.8 EEG abnormalities, single episode
- Williams D., (1969) as cited in Brower, 2001
14- PET
- Frontal lobe and violent behaviour
- psychiatric patients versus controls
- decreased cortical blood flow/metabolism
associated w/repetitive and purposeless violent
behaviour - Volkov et al., 1995 as cited in Brower, 2001
- OF and aggression
- antisocial PD versus non-psychiatric controls
- decreased medial and left anterior orbitofrontal
metabolism correlated with increased scores on
self reported aggression scales - Goyer et al., 1994 as cited in Brower, 2001
15But!
- no study can necessarily show that frontal lobe
(OF and PFC) dysfunction or pathology can predict
violent crime - Studies on antisocial PD, aggressive PD are NOT
CAUSATIONAL - frontal brain activity merely regarded as having
a relationship with aggressive behaviour
(CORRELATION ONLY)
16 Borderline PD (BPD)
- Symptoms of interest
- characteristic fear of being abandoned
- rigidity, poorly adapted affective response
- impulsive behaviour
- SIB
- voices
17BPD Areas of Interest
- Limbic System
- Amygdala
- Hippocampus
- Anterior Cingulate Cortex (ACC)
- Frontal Lobe
- OF
- PFC
18Limbic System Amygdala(Herpertz et al., 2001)
- fMRI on amygdalic functioning amongst BPD to
investigate activity to (low) aversive stimuli - Abnormal activity on both hemispheres (over
activity) - Low-level stressors activate BPD amygdala?
- Butsmall sample size
19Limbic Amygdala Hippocampus(Driessen et al.,
2000 Schmahl et al., 2003 Tebartz van Elst et
al., 2003)
- Volumetric MRI measurements
- BPD (meds trauma/abuse) vs. Cs
- measured volume amygdala and hippocampus
- Driessen et al., 2000
- Amygdala 8 smaller in BPD vs. Cs
- Hippocampus 16 smaller in BPD vs. Cs
- Schmahl et al., 2003
- Amygdala 21.9 smaller in BPD vs. Cs
- Hippocampus 13.1 smaller in BPD vs. Cs
- Confounds?
20Limbic Amygdala, Hippocampus, ACCFrontal
OF(Tebartz van Elst et al., 2003)
- Volumetric MRI
- 8 unmedicated w/BPD vs. 8 Cs
- Amygdala 23-55 smaller in BPD
- Hippocampus 20-21 smaller in BPD
- ACC 26 smaller in BPD
- OF 24 smaller in BPD
21Frontal OF and PFC
- frontolimbic brain pathology correlated with
affective and impulsive or aggressive behaviour?
(Tebartz van Elst et al., 2003) - OF impulsivity?
- Uroxocide perpetrators (killed wives during
attempted abandonment) and decreased PFC
metabolism (Dutton, 2002) - PFC aggression?
22Summary
- SPD
- Temporal (global gyrus)
- CC (anterior posterior)
- Aggressive/Violent PD
- Frontal Lobe (OF, VMPFC)
- APD
- PFC
- BPD
- Limbic System (amygdala, hippocampus, ACC)
- Frontal Lobe (OF, PFC)
23BUT!
- Possible research limitations
- Small sample sizes
- Confounds (medications, comorbidity with other
disorders) - Research conclusions may vary according to
methodology - RESEARCH CORRELATIONAL ONLY
24References
- Brower, M.C. Price, B.H. (2001).
Neuropsychiatry of frontal lobe dysfunction in
violent and criminal behaviour a critical
review. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and
Psychiatry, 71, 720-726. - Dickey, C.C. McCarley, R.W., Voglmaier, M.M.,
Frumin, M., Niznikievicz, M.A., Hirayasu, Y.,
Fraone, S., Seidman, L.J. Shenton, M.E. (2002).
Smaller left Heschls gyrus volume in patients
with schizotypal personality disorder. American
Journal of Psychiatry, 159, 1521-1527. - Downhill Jr., J.E., Buchsbaum, M.S., Wei, T.,
Spiegel-Cohen, J.S., Hazlett, E.A., Haznedear,
M.M., Silverman, J. Siever, L.J. (2000). Shape
and size of the corpus callosum in schizophrenia
and schizotypal personality disorder.
Schizophrenia Research, 42, 193-208. - Driessen, M., Hermann, J., Stahl, K., Zwaan, M.,
Meier, S., Hill, A., Osterheider, M. Petersen,
D. (2000). Magnetic resonance imaging volumes of
the hippocampus and the amygdala in women with
borderline personality disorder and early
traumatization. Archives of General Psychiatry,
57, 1115-1122. - Dutton, D.G. (2001). The neurobiology of
abandonment homicide. Aggression and Violent
Behavior, 7, 407-421. - Herpertz, S.C., Dietrich, T.M., Wenning, B.,
Krings, T., Erberich, S.G., Wilmes, K., Thron, A.
Sass, H. (2001). Evidence of abnormal amygdala
functioning in borderline personality disorder a
functional MRI study. Society of Biological
Psychiatry, 50, 292-298.
25References contd
- Raine, A., Lencz, T., Bihrle, S., LaCasse, L.
Colletti, P. (2000). Reduced prefrontal gray
matter volume and reduced autonomic activity in
antisocial personality disorder. Archives of
General Psychiatry, 57, 119-127. - Schmahl, C.G., Vermetten, E., Elzinga, B.M.
Bremner, J.D. (2003). Magnetic resonance imaging
of hippocampal and amygdala volume in women with
childhood abuse and borderline personality
disorder. Psychiatry Research Neuroimaging, 122,
193-198. - Siever L.J., Koenigsberg, H.W., Harvey, P.,
Mitropolou, V., Laruelle, M., Abi-Dargham, A.,
Goodman, M. Buchsbaum, M. (2002). Cognitive and
brain function in schizotypal personality
disorder. Schizophrenia Research, 54, 157-167. - Tebartz van Elst, L., Hesslinger, B., Thiel, T.
Geiger, E., Haegle, K., Lemieux, L., Lieb, K.,
Bohus, M., Hennig, J Ebert, D. (2003).
Frontolimbic brain abnormalities in patients with
borderline personality disorder a volumetric
magnetic resonance imaging study. Society of
Biological Psychiatry, 54, 163-171. - Van Reekum, R., Links, P., Federov, C. (1994).
Impulsivity in Borderline Personality Disorder.
Biological and Neurobehavioural Studies of
Borderline Personality Disorder, \ in Psychiatry,
45, 1-23. - Other resources
- For gross anatomy University of Arkansas for
Medical Sciences, retrieved on November 22, 2002.
http//anatomy.uams.edu/HTMLpages/anatomyhtml/brai
n.html