“Importantly, reduced activity in a frontal area of the brain, called the subgenual anterior cingulate, may be unique to borderline personality disorder and could serve to differentiate it from other related conditions, such as recurrent major depression,” said Ruocco in the January 15 Biological Psychiatry. “[T]hese findings could suggest that dysfunctions in critical frontal ‘control’ centers might be normalized after successful treatment,” he concluded.
To read more in Psychiatric News about treating borderline personality disorder, click here. And see also American Psychiatric Publishing's book, Psychodynamic Psychotherapy for Personality Disorders: Clinical Handbook.
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