Abstract

Individuals with borderline personality disorder (BPD) show self-regulatory deficits, associated with reduced heart-rate variability (HRV). However, results on reduced HRV in BPD remain heterogeneous, thus encouraging the search for developmental constructs explaining this heterogeneity. The present study first examined predictors of reduced resting-state HRV in BPD, namely the interaction between self-reported adult attachment insecurity and childhood trauma. Second, we investigated if alterations in resting-state HRV are modified by intranasal oxytocin administration, as oxytocin may enhance HRV and is implicated in the interaction between childhood trauma and disturbed attachment for the pathogenesis of BPD. In a randomized, placebo-controlled trial, 53 unmedicated women with BPD and 60 healthy controls (HC) self-administered either 24 I.U. of oxytocin or placebo and underwent a 4-min electrocardiogram. Our results replicate significantly reduced HRV in women with BPD, explained up to 16% by variations in childhood trauma and attachment insecurity. At high levels of acute attachment insecurity, higher levels of childhood trauma significantly predicted reduced HRV in BPD. However, our results do not support a significant effect of oxytocin on mean HRV, and no interaction effect emerged including childhood trauma and attachment insecurity. Our findings highlight a complex interaction between reduced vagal activity and developmental factors in BPD.

Highlights

  • Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a severe mental disorder, which affects around 15–28% patients in clinical populations (APA 2001)

  • The moderation analysis revealed that the association between childhood trauma and HRV levels was significant in those women with borderline personality disorder (BPD) demonstrating high levels of attachment insecurity

  • The aim of the current study was to (1) replicate findings on reduced HRV at rest in women with BPD compared to healthy controls (HC), and to test if the (2) interaction between childhood trauma and attachment insecurity predicted reduced HRV in women with BPD and HC

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Summary

Introduction

Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a severe mental disorder, which affects around 15–28% patients in clinical populations (APA 2001). In which the sympathetic stress system is hyperactive and the parasympathetic system is hypoactive (e.g., lower HRV at rest), in turn, is theorized to be associated with various pathological conditions (Thayer and Brosschot 2005), including BPD (for meta-analysis, see Koenig et al 2016). With regard to the aetiology of BPD, various results on reduced HRV point to a chronic reduction of the vagal ANS component, potentially reflecting a lack for efficient self-regulation (Thayer et al 2009; Koenig et al 2017; Weise et al 2020a, b). Longitudinal studies suggest that changes in adolescent resting-state HRV are associated with changes in BPD symptomatology (Koenig et al 2018; Sigrist et al 2021), and even predicted clinical symptom reduction in adolescent BPD patients receiving dialectical behavioural therapy (Weise et al 2020b)

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