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FC29-01 - Reduced cortical inhibition in violent offenders: A study with transcranial magnetic stimulation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2020

F. Philipp-Wiegmann
Affiliation:
Institut for Forensic Psychiatry, Homburg, Germany
K.D. Römer
Affiliation:
Institut for Forensic Psychiatry, Homburg, Germany
W. Retz
Affiliation:
Institut for Forensic Psychiatry, Homburg, Germany
M. Rösler
Affiliation:
Institut for Forensic Psychiatry, Homburg, Germany

Abstract

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Introduction

Aggression and violent behaviour are often noticed as a threat of society. Therefore, the understanding of violent behaviour has high social relevance.

Objectives

The investigation sample comprised 80 right-handers: 40 prisoners who committed severe violent crimes and 40 controls with no history of violence. All subjects were male and matched for age.

Aimes

We performed a study with transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in a sample of violent offenders in order to measure cortical inhibition in the motoneural system which is part of the frontal cortex.

Methods

To investigate the intracortical inhibition and the intracortical facilitation we conducted paired-pulse stimulation according to the technique of Kujirai et al. (1993). The investigation sample comprised 80 right-handers: 40 prisoners who committed severe violent crimes and 40 controls with no history of violence. All subjects were male and matched for age.

Results

Using the paired-pulse paradigm with interstimulus intervals (ISI) of 1–15 ms, a reduced cortical inhibition (ISI 3 ms) was found in violent offenders compared with control subjects in the left cortex.

Conclusions

These findings corroborate the hypothesis of inhibition deficits in violent offenders when compared with control subjects due to a lack of impulsive control.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2011
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