Impaired striatal Glutamate/GABA regulation in violent offenders with antisocial personality disorder and psychopathy

Author:

Tully John1,Pereira Andreia2,Sethi Arjun,Griem Julia,Cross Ben,Williams Steven3ORCID,Murphy Declan2ORCID,Blair James,Blackwood Nigel2

Affiliation:

1. University of Nottingham

2. King's College London

3. Institute of Pyschiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London

Abstract

Abstract Men with antisocial personality disorder (ASPD) with or without psychopathy (+/-P) are responsible for most violent crime in society. Development of effective treatments is hindered by poor understanding of the neurochemical underpinnings of the condition. Men with ASPD with and without psychopathy demonstrate impulsive decision-making, associated with striatal abnormalities in functional neuroimaging studies. However, to date, no study has directly examined the potential neurochemical underpinnings of such abnormalities. We therefore investigated striatal glutamate: GABA ratio using Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy in 30 violent offenders (16 ASPD-P, 14 ASPD+P) and 21 healthy non-offenders. Men with ASPD+/-P had a highly significant reduction in striatal glutamate : GABA ratio compared to non-offenders. We report, for the first time, striatal Glutamate/GABA dysregulation in ASPD+/-P, and discuss how this may be related to core behavioral abnormalities in the disorders.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference103 articles.

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