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Trauma-related dissociation: Psychological features and psycho-physiological responses to script-driven imagery in borderline personality disorder

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

S. Jürgen
Affiliation:
Centre for Psychiatry Südwürttemberg, Weissenau, Clinic of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy I, Ravensburg, Germany
S. Tilman
Affiliation:
Centre for Psychiatry Südwürttemberg, Weissenau, Clinic of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy I, Ravensburg, Germany
T. Stefan
Affiliation:
Centre for Psychiatry Südwürttemberg, Weissenau, Clinic of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy I, Ravensburg, Germany

Abstract

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Background

Defense reactions to threatening situations are vital adaptations to stress that protect organisms from injury and ensure survival. We retrospectively investigated the role of peritraumatic dissociation (PD) in the occurrence of severe psychopathology and dissociative patterns of reactions in borderline personality disorder (BPD).

Methods

We recruited 28 patients with a clinical diagnosis of BPD and 15 healthy controls. The BPD group was divided according to the level of PD (low vs. high): BPD and PD (n = 15) and BPD only (n = 13). We conducted an extensive investigation of history of trauma, clinical status, and measurements of emotional and physiologic responses to recall of personalized aversive experiences.

Results

Participants with BPD and high PD displayed highest degrees of trauma exposure and clinical symptoms. Their significant heart rate decline during the imagery of personal traumatic events was opposed to the heart rate increases exhibited by the other two groups and may indicate a dissociative reaction pattern. Skin conductance responses did not differentiate between groups. Several emotional responses to imagery provided also support of the idea that PD may play a role in memory processing of traumatic events and thus in the aggravation and maintenance of symptoms in particularly severe forms of BPD.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
e-Poster Viewing: Psychophysiology
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017
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