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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Beblo is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Beblo.


Biological Psychiatry | 2004

Posttraumatic stress disorder and fMRI activation patterns of traumatic memory in patients with borderline personality disorder.

Martin Driessen; Thomas Beblo; Markus Mertens; Martina Piefke; Nina Rullkoetter; Anamaria Silva-Saavedra; L. Reddemann; Harald Rau; Hans J. Markowitsch; Hella Wulff; Wolfgang Lange; Friedrich G. Woermann

BACKGROUND Early traumatization and additional posttraumatic stress disorder are frequent in patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD). The purpose of this study was to investigate neural correlates of traumatic memory in BPD with and without posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). METHODS We studied 12 traumatized female patients BPD, 6 of them with and 6 without PTSD. According to an autobiographical interview key words (cues) were defined for traumatic and for negative but nontraumatic episodes. In a block-designed fMRI task patients recalled these episodes. Contrasts between trauma condition and nontrauma condition were analyzed. RESULTS Analyses for all subjects revealed activation of orbitofrontal cortex areas in both hemispheres, anterior temporal lobes, and occipital areas. In the subgroup without PTSD, activation of orbitofrontal cortex on both sides and Brocas area predominated. In the subgroup with additional PTSD, we observed right more than left activation of anterior temporal lobes, mesiotemporal areas, amygdala, posterior cingulate gyrus, occipital areas, and cerebellum. CONCLUSIONS Dependent on absence or presence of additional PTSD different neural networks seem to be involved in the traumatic memory of patients with BPD.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2009

Neural correlates of the individual emotional Stroop in borderline personality disorder.

Katja Wingenfeld; Nina Rullkoetter; Christoph Mensebach; Thomas Beblo; Markus Mertens; Stefan H. Kreisel; Max Toepper; Martin Driessen; Friedrich G. Woermann

OBJECTIVE Emotional dysregulation is a key feature of borderline personality disorder (BPD) with altered inhibitory functions having suggested as being crucial. The anterior cingulate cortex and further prefrontal brain regions are crucial for response inhibition. The regulation of emotions is ensured via inhibitory control over the amygdala. The present study aimed to investigate neural correlates of response inhibition in BPD by using an emotional Stroop paradigm extending the task to word stimuli which were related to stressful life events. METHODS Twenty BPD patients and 20 healthy controls underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while performing the individual emotional Stroop task. A block design was used with the following word type conditions: neutral words, general negative words, and individual negative words. The individual negative words were recruited from a prior interview conducted with each participant. RESULTS While BPD patients had overall slower reaction times in the Stroop task compared to healthy controls, there was no increased slowing with emotional interference. Controls exhibited significant fMRI blood oxygenation level-dependent signal increases in the anterior cingulate cortex as well as in frontal cortex contrasting generally negative vs. neutral and individual negative vs. neutral conditions, respectively. BPD patients did not show equivalent signal changes. CONCLUSIONS These results provide further evidence for a dysfunctional network of brain areas in BPD, including the ACC and frontal brain regions. These areas are crucial for the regulation of stress and emotions, the core problems of BPD patients.


Neuropsychology Review | 2011

Specifying the Neuropsychology of Affective Disorders: Clinical, Demographic and Neurobiological Factors

Thomas Beblo; Grant Sinnamon; Bernhard T. Baune

Neuropsychological research in patients with affective disorders shows heterogeneous results with regard to the severity and profile of cognitive impairments. In this paper we hypothesize that the investigation of clinical (subtypes, comorbidity, traumatization, personality, severity, diurnal swings, course, duration, age of onset, biased processing, rumination, motivation, experience of failure, sleep, suicidal tendencies, computer attitudes), demographic (age, education, gender) and neurobiological factors (structural and functional brain changes, glucocorticoids, medication, ECT) that are related to cognitive performance has specified the understanding of severity and profile of neuropsychological impairments. We reviewed the literature pertaining to clinical, demographic and neurobiological factors following Pubmed and PsychInfo databases using different combinations of general key-terms including “Affective Disorder,” “Depression,” “Mania,” “Neuropsychological,” “Neurobiological,” “Moderator,” and “Review” as well as more specific demographic, clinical and neurobiological search terms. Findings from the literature show that the consideration of these factors has improved knowledge about the severity of neuropsychological impairments in patients with affective disorders whereas the neuropsychological profile is still poorly understood. Despite limited understanding, however, the existent results provide promising suggestions for the development of treatment programs.


Psychological Medicine | 2006

Functional MRI correlates of the recall of unresolved life events in borderline personality disorder

Thomas Beblo; Martin Driessen; Markus Mertens; Katja Wingenfeld; Martina Piefke; Nina Rullkoetter; Anamaria Silva-Saavedra; Christoph Mensebach; L. Reddemann; Harald Rau; Hans J. Markowitsch; Hella Wulff; Wolfgang Lange; Cristina Berea; Isabella Ollech; Friedrich G. Woermann

BACKGROUND Patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD) frequently report unresolved life events but it is still poorly understood, how these experiences are represented in the brain. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), the present study aimed at investigating the neural correlates of the recall of unresolved life events in patients with BPD and healthy controls. METHOD Twenty female BPD patients and 21 healthy control subjects underwent fMRI. During measurement subjects recalled unresolved and resolved negative life events. Individual cue words were used to stimulate autobiographical memory. After scanning, subjects rated their emotional states during the recall of both types of memories. RESULTS When contrasting unresolved and resolved life events, patients showed significant bilateral activation of frontotemporal areas including the insula, amygdala, and the anterior cingulate cortex, the left posterior cingulate cortex, right occipital cortex, the bilateral cerebellum and the midbrain. In healthy subjects, no differential brain activation was related to these conditions. The 2 x 2 factorial analysis (DeltaBPD - Deltacontrols) revealed similar results with bilateral activation of the frontal cortex including parts of the insula and of the orbitofrontal cortex, temporal activation including the amygdala, activation of the right occipital cortex, and parts of the cerebellum. Patients but not controls reported higher levels of anxiety and helplessness during the unresolved versus resolved memory condition. CONCLUSIONS The activation of both, the amygdala and prefrontal areas, might reflect an increased effortful but insufficient attempt to control intensive emotions during the recall of unresolved life events in patients with BPD.


Cognitive Neuropsychiatry | 1999

Neuropsychological Correlates of Major Depression: A Short-term Follow-up

Thomas Beblo; Bruno Baumann; Bernhard Bogerts; Claus-W. Wallesch; Manfred Herrmann

The present study investigated neuropsychological correlates of major depression and their course following treatment. We investigated 41 patients with major depression according to DSM-III-R criteria, who do not fulfil criteria of Alzheimers disease, with a standardised clinical interview, different self- and observer-rating depression scales, and a comprehensive neuropsychological examination, and 27 subjects were reinvestigated 4.5 weeks after the first assessment. We found deficits in all cognitive domains with a predominant decline in tasks of cognitive flexibility and fluency. Patients who respond to antidepressive treatment showed a significant improvement in executive functions at the followup examination. Our data support the hypothesis that cognitive disorders in major depression may be associated with a frontostriatal dysfunction.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2006

Deficits in visual functions and neuropsychological inconsistency in Borderline Personality Disorder

Thomas Beblo; Anamaria Silva Saavedra; Christoph Mensebach; Wolfgang Lange; Hans-Joachim Markowitsch; Harald Rau; Friedrich G. Woermann; Martin Driessen

For Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) cognitive and perceptual impairments were reported in some but not all studies. The aim of the present study was to analyze the neuropsychological performance of BPD patients in different domains. Predominant impairments of visual functions and an increased intra-individual variation of test performances within neuropsychological domains were expected. We investigated 22 patients with BPD and a matched sample of 22 healthy control subjects. A comprehensive clinical and neuropsychological test battery was administered. Effect sizes indicate primarily deficits of visual functions such as visual memory (Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised, WMS-R: Visual pair associates and visual reproduction, Complex Figure Test: Recall) and visuo-spatial abilities (Leistungspruefsystem, LPS 9 and 10: Spatial imagination and embedded figures), but also of executive functions (Tower of Hanoi, Trail Making Test-B, semantic and figural fluency, LPS 4: Reasoning). In addition, the intra-individual ranges of neuropsychological test results in BPD patients were increased compared to those of healthy subjects. This finding might be due to a high degree of temporary stress that interferes with effective cognitive processing. Further research is needed to confirm the present results and to control for stress during the test procedure.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2012

Increased suppression of negative and positive emotions in major depression

Thomas Beblo; Silvia Carvalho Fernando; Sabrina Klocke; Julia Griepenstroh; Steffen Aschenbrenner; Martin Driessen

BACKGROUND Patients with major depression (MDD) show increased suppression of negative emotions. Emotion suppression is related to depressive symptoms such as depressive mood and anhedonia. It is not clear whether MDD patients also suppress positive emotions. In the present study we aim to investigate suppression of both negative and positive emotions in MDD patients as well as the relation between emotion suppression and depressive symptoms. In addition, we suggest that emotion suppression might be associated with fear of emotions. METHODS 39 MDD patients and 41 matched healthy control subjects were investigated for emotion suppression and fear of emotions with the Emotion Acceptance Questionnaire (EAQ). In addition, we applied additional questionnaires to validate emotion suppression findings and to assess depressive symptoms. RESULTS MDD patients reported increased suppression of both negative and positive emotions. Suppression of negative and positive emotions was related to depressive symptoms. Patients also reported more fear of emotions than healthy subjects and this fear was related to emotion suppression in both study samples. LIMITATIONS Due to the cross-sectional and correlational study design, causal directions between the variables tested cannot be stated. CONCLUSIONS Fear of emotion might be one reason why MDD patients suppress emotions. With regard to positive emotions, our results strongly suggest that therapeutic approaches should not only encourage patients to participate in potentially enjoyable situations but that patients may also benefit from practicing the allowance of pleasant emotions.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2012

Associations of childhood trauma with hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal function in borderline personality disorder and major depression.

Silvia Carvalho Fernando; Thomas Beblo; Nicole Schlosser; Kirsten Terfehr; Christian Otte; Bernd Löwe; Oliver T. Wolf; Carsten Spitzer; Martin Driessen; Katja Wingenfeld

BACKGROUND Alterations of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis are hallmarks in major depressive disorder (MDD) and there is some evidence about similar patterns in borderline personality disorder (BPD). This study examines HPA axis abnormalities with respect to clinical characteristics in both BPD (n=24) and MDD patients (n=33) as well as in healthy control participants (n=41). METHOD A 0.5mg dexamethasone suppression test was administered to evaluate basal cortisol release and HPA feedback sensitivity via salivary cortisol. Traumatic experiences in childhood as well as severity of borderline and depressive symptom severity and dissociation were obtained by self-report questionnaires. RESULTS Compared to the healthy control group, BPD and MDD patients exhibited both enhanced cortisol concentrations before and after the administration of 0.5mg dexamethasone. Higher cortisol levels were positively correlated to a history of childhood trauma, current dissociative symptoms and severity of borderline and depressive symptoms. Regression analyses revealed that some aspects of early trauma were associated with cortisol release before and after dexamethasone, whereas psychopathology did not contribute to the regression model. CONCLUSIONS HPA dysfunctions appear to be related rather to childhood trauma than to psychopathology in adulthood. Exposure to childhood trauma may contribute to long-lasting alterations in HPA activity and might enhance the risk for the development of later mental disorder.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2010

Effects of acute cortisol administration on autobiographical memory in patients with major depression and healthy controls

Nicole Schlosser; Oliver T. Wolf; Silvia Carvalho Fernando; Kirsten Riedesel; Christian Otte; Christoph Muhtz; Thomas Beblo; Martin Driessen; Bernd Löwe; Katja Wingenfeld

OBJECTIVE Overgeneral autobiographical memory has become a well established phenomenon within major depressive disorder (MDD). Neuroendocrinologically, MDD is often characterized by a dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, i.e. hypercortisolemia and reduced feedback sensitivity. In healthy participants cortisol administration has been found to impair autobiographical memory retrieval. The purpose of this study was to compare the effects of acute cortisol administration on autobiographical memory in MDD patients with the effects observed in healthy controls. We hypothesized that in contrast to healthy control subjects acute cortisol administration would not affect autobiographical memory performance in MDD due to reduced central glucocorticoid sensitivity. METHODS In a placebo-controlled, double-blind crossover study, 16 patients with MDD and 16 healthy control subjects received a placebo or 10mg of hydrocortisone orally before autobiographical memory testing (AMT). RESULTS In the placebo condition depressed patients performed poorer than controls. After hydrocortisone intake, healthy subjects reported significantly fewer specific memories on the AMT compared to placebo treatment. In contrast, memory specificity of MDD patients was not affected by hydrocortisone treatment. CONCLUSIONS The present findings replicate previous findings of impaired autobiographical memory retrieval after hydrocortisone treatment in healthy subjects and of impaired AMT performance in depressed patients. We speculate that the missing acute impairing effect of hydrocortisone on autobiographical memory in depressed patients might reflect reduced central glucocorticoid sensitivity. However alternative explanations cannot be ruled out.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2005

Dexamethasone suppression test in borderline personality disorder—effects of posttraumatic stress disorder

Wolfgang Lange; Hella Wulff; Christina Berea; Thomas Beblo; Anamaria Silva Saavedra; Christoph Mensebach; Katja Wingenfeld; Martin Driessen

BACKGROUND Divergent findings of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis functioning in borderline personality disorder (BPD) may be caused by a different degree of comorbid posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), in which alterations of the HPA axis are well known. Here we investigate alterations of the HPA axis in BPD patients with and without comorbid PTSD compared to healthy controls. Considering previous findings current major depression (MDD) was taken into account as a confounding variable. METHODS Apart from clinical assessment the 0.5 mg dexamethasone suppression test (DST) was performed in 21 female borderline patients and 23 healthy controls. RESULTS Twelve BPD patients suffered from comorbid PTSD. Relative suppression (%) did not differ between healthy controls and the total BPD group, but BPD patients with comorbid PTSD showed increased suppression compared to those without. Comorbid MDD was not associated with suppression. CONCLUSIONS Our results do not indicate a dysfunction of the HPA axis in BPD. However, comorbid PTSD seems to be associated with a relative hypersuppression in the 0.5 mg DST.

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