MRI Study for females ages 18-45 with Borderline Personality Disorder(BPD): This study is a non-treatment study that involves 2 visits. Study Hypothesis: 1. To refine and pilot test functional neuroimaging paradigms to assess the amygdala response to neutral facial expressions across positive and negative emotional contexts. 2. To assess whether patients with borderline personality disorder show a heightened amygdala response to neutral facial expressions relative to healthy controls (20 female healthy controls, 20 females with borderline personality disorder). 3. To assess the relationship between individual differences in clinical ratings of personality and affective regulation, and the amygdala response to facial expressions.
The first visit will be an interview assessment and will take place at the Ambulatory Research Center (ARC), Fairview University-Riverside Campus. In addition to the interview assessment, we will ask you to complete a set of questionnaires about your behavior and mood. This first visit will last approximately 2.5-3 hours. Following the interview assessment, if you are eligible for the MRI study we will contact you to schedule an MRI scan on a separate visit. This visit will last approximately 2 hours. At this visit you will have an MRI scan of your brain. Prior to the MRI scan, you will have a practice session in an MRI simulator.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
20
University of Minnesota, Dept of Psychiatry
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
To refine and pilot test functional neuroimaging paradigms to assess the amygdala response to neutral facial expressions across positive and negative emotional contexts.
1. To refine and pilot test functional neuroimaging paradigms to assess the amygdala response to neutral facial expressions across positive and negative emotional contexts. 2. To assess whether patients with borderline personality disorder show a heightened amygdala response to neutral facial expressions relative to healthy controls (20 female healthy controls, 20 females with borderline personality disorder). 3. To assess the relationship between individual differences in clinical ratings of personality and affective regulation, and the amygdala response to facial expressions
Time frame: 2 years
Secondary Outcomes
2\) To assess whether patients with borderline personality disorder show a heightened amygdala response to neutral facial expressions relative to healthy controls (20 female healthy controls, 20 females with borderline personality disorder). 3\) To assess the relationship between individual differences in clinical ratings of personality and affective regulation, and the amygdala response to facial expressions.
Time frame: 2 years
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