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Neural correlates of behavioral inhibition in healthy people and in patients with borderline personality disorder and ADHD

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

P. Linhartová
Affiliation:
Masaryk university and university hospital, department of psychiatry, BRNO, Czech Republic
M. Kuhn
Affiliation:
Masaryk university and university hospital, department of psychiatry, BRNO, Czech Republic
A. Damborská
Affiliation:
Masaryk university and university hospital, department of psychiatry, BRNO, Czech Republic Masaryk University, central European institute of technology CEITEC, BRNO, Czech Republic
M. Lamoš
Affiliation:
Masaryk University, central European institute of technology CEITEC, BRNO, Czech Republic
M. Mikl
Affiliation:
Masaryk University, central European institute of technology CEITEC, BRNO, Czech Republic
R. Barteček
Affiliation:
Masaryk university and university hospital, department of psychiatry, BRNO, Czech Republic
P. Theiner
Affiliation:
Masaryk university and university hospital, department of psychiatry, BRNO, Czech Republic
T. Kašpárek
Affiliation:
Masaryk university and university hospital, department of psychiatry, BRNO, Czech Republic
M. Bareš
Affiliation:
Masaryk University, central European institute of technology CEITEC, BRNO, Czech Republic

Abstract

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Introduction

Deficits in behavioral inhibition leading to impulsivity occur frequently in many otherwise different psychiatric diseases, mainly ADHD and borderline personality disorder (BPD). However, the research is complicated by using of different tests and their parameters. Further, the role of frontoparietal network in behavioral inhibition has been questioned recently.

Objectives

The aims of our studies were:

– to present the influence of differences in inhibition tasks parameters;

– to describe neural correlates of behavioral inhibition in healthy people;

– to compare them with BPD and ADHD patients.

Methods

We implemented two different variants of Go/NoGo Task, one designed for behavioral research and the second for neuroimaging. Thirty healthy participants (37% of women, age range 15 to 33 years) underwent behavioral and fMRI measurement. Further, groups of patients with BPD, ADHD and their healthy controls underwent the Go/NoGo Task under both fMRI and EEG.

Results

The results show differences in behavioral performance based on different task parameters. The fMRI results in healthy people show specific activation patterns within the frontoparietal network associated with inhibition trials (mainly inferior frontal gyrus, insula, cingulate gyrus, SMA, inferior parietal lobule). Further, we present differences between patients with BPD, ADHD and controls in BOLD signal and ERPs.

Conclusions

Go/NoGo Task design substantially influences the subjects’ behavioral performance. Our results with methodologically upgraded Go/NoGo Task design provide support for the inhibition frontoparietal brain network and its different activations in BPD and ADHD patients. The research was supported by Ministry of Health of the Czech Republic, grant nr. 15-30062A.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
e-Poster Walk: Neuroimaging and neuroscience in psychiatry
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017
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