4.6 Article

Cognitive behavioral based group psychotherapy focusing on repetitive negative thinking: Decreased uncontrollability of rumination is related to brain perfusion increases in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex

Journal

JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC RESEARCH
Volume 136, Issue -, Pages 281-287

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2021.02.011

Keywords

ASL; Repetitive negative thinking; Group psychotherapy; LARSS Uncontrollability

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61876156]
  2. Ghent University Special Research Fund' [BOF 16/GOA/017]
  3. Ghent University Multidisciplinary Research Partnership 'The integrative neuroscience of behavioral control'

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This study found that cognitive behavioral based group psychotherapy (CBGP) significantly reduced uncontrollable rumination and increased brain perfusion in areas associated with emotion regulation and inhibition of rumination processes.
Repetitive negative thinking (RNT) is a core process underlying various psychiatric disorders. ?Uncontrollability of rumination (UOR)? is one the most maladaptive factors of rumination, but little is known on how cognitive behavioral focused RNT psychotherapy may alter brain activity. In a subsample of 47 patients suffering from RNT who also underwent brain imaging (registered RCT trial NCT01983033), we evaluated the effect of cognitive behavioral based group psychotherapy (CBGP) (n = 25) as compared to a delayed treatment control group (DTCG) (n = 22) on frontolimbic brain perfusion with a focus on UOR. This RNT construct was measured using the subscale ?uncontrollability? of the Dutch version of the Rumination on Sadness Scale (LARSS-U). Brain perfusion was assessed with arterial spin labeling (ASL)-fMRI. LARSS-U scale scores significantly decreased in the CBGP cohort whereas no significant changes emerged in the DTCG group. Compared to the DTCG, this decrease on UOR in the CBGP group was related to significant perfusion increases in the left (dorsolateral) prefrontal cortex, part of the executive network. Besides the fact that CBGP significantly reduced RNT, this attenuation of uncontrollable ruminative thoughts was related to brain perfusion increases areas documented to be involved in the top down control of adaptive emotion regulation and the inhibition of ruminative processes.

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