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Oxytocin and Reduction of Social Threat Hypersensitivity in Women With Borderline Personality Disorder

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TLDR
Borderline patients exhibit a hypersensitivity to social threat in early, reflexive stages of information processing, and oxytocin may decrease social threat hypersensitivity and thus reduce anger and aggressive behavior in borderline personality disorder or other psychiatric disorders with enhanced threat-driven reactive aggression.
Abstract
Objective: Patients with borderline personality disorder are characterized by emotional hyperarousal with increased stress levels, anger proneness, and hostile, impulsive behaviors. They tend to ascribe anger to ambiguous facial expressions and exhibit enhanced and prolonged reactions in response to threatening social cues, associated with enhanced and prolonged amygdala responses. Because the intranasal administration of the neuropeptide oxytocin has been shown to improve facial recognition and to shift attention away from negative social information, the authors investigated whether borderline patients would benefit from oxytocin administration. Method: In a randomized placebocontrolled double-blind group design, 40 nonmedicated, adult female patients with a current DSM-IV diagnosis of borderline personality disorder (two patients were excluded based on hormonal analyses) and 41 healthy women, matched on age, education, and IQ, took part in an emotion classification task 45 minutes after intranasal administration of 26 IU of oxytocin or placebo. Dependent variables were latencies and number or initial reflexive eye movements measured by eye tracking, manual response latencies, and blood-oxygen-level-dependent responses of theamygdalato angryandfearfulcompared with happy facial expressions. Results: Borderline patients exhibited more and faster initial fixation changes to the eyes of angry faces combined with increased amygdala activation in response to angry faces compared with the control group. These abnormal behavioral and neural patterns were normalized after oxytocin administration. Conclusions: Borderline patients exhibit a hypersensitivity to social threat in early, reflexive stages of information processing. Oxytocin may decrease social threat hypersensitivity and thus reduce anger and aggressive behavior in borderline personality disorder or other psychiatric disorders with enhanced threat-driven reactive aggression. (Am J Psychiatry 2013; 170:1169–1177)

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Social Cognition and Borderline Personality Disorder: Splitting and Trust Impairment Findings.

TL;DR: This article synthesizes the extant literature splitting and trust impairments in BPD, identifies avenues for further investigation, and discusses the relative promise of different methods to evaluate these clinical processes.
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Increased serum and urinary oxytocin concentrations after nasal administration in beagle dogs

TL;DR: The results confirm that intranasally administered oxytocin passes into the blood stream and the peak values are also similar in both the serum and the urinary Oxytocin concentration measurements, although there are large individual differences.
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Oxytocin increases eye gaze in schizophrenia.

TL;DR: Intranasal oxytocin enhanced eye gaze in men with schizophrenia, consistent with findings that Oxytocin optimizes processing of social stimuli, and whether changes in eye gaze impact social cognition and functional outcomes is investigated.
Book ChapterDOI

Oxytocin and Borderline Personality Disorder.

TL;DR: While a beneficial effect of oxytocin on threat processing and stress responsiveness was found, other studies using an oxytocIn challenge design presented with rather heterogeneous results.
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Wandering minds in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and borderline personality disorder

TL;DR: Excessive spontaneous mind wandering (MW-S) is a trans-diagnostic process present in both ADHD and BPD, yet the underlying mechanisms of this experience may be driven by anxiety/depression in BPD but reflect a core process in ADHD.
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Social support and oxytocin interact to suppress cortisol and subjective responses to psychosocial stress

TL;DR: Oxytocin seems to enhance the buffering effect of social support on stress responsiveness, concur with data from animal research suggesting an important role of oxytocin as an underlying biological mechanism for stress-protective effects of positive social interactions.
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Atlas of the Human Brain

TL;DR: This greatly enlarged new edition of Atlas of the Human Brain provides the most detailed and accurate delineations of brain structure available and includes features which assist in the new fields of neuroscience - functional imaging, resting state imaging and tractography.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oxytocin Modulates Neural Circuitry for Social Cognition and Fear in Humans

TL;DR: It is shown that human amygdala function is strongly modulated by oxytocin, and this results indicate a neural mechanism for the effects of Oxytocin in social cognition in the human brain and provide a methodology and rationale for exploring therapeutic strategies in disorders in which abnormal amygdala function has been implicated, such as social phobia or autism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oxytocin and vasopressin in the human brain: social neuropeptides for translational medicine

TL;DR: OXT and AVP are emerging as targets for novel treatment approaches — particularly in synergistic combination with psychotherapy — for mental disorders characterized by social dysfunction, such as autism, social anxiety disorder, borderline personality disorder and schizophrenia.
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