Transcript Attachment
WORLD LEADERS AND
PERSONALITY DISORDERS
Dr. B. Al-Saigh
PERSONALITY DISORDERS
Psychiatry Rounds
August ‘06
RESOURCES :
Assessment and Management of Personality Disorders
Randy Ward, M.D., Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee,
Wisconsin
American Family Physician, October 2004
Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Patients With
Borderline Personality Disorder
American Psychiatric Association
Fasten Your Seat Belts
ELIAS A. ZERHOUNI, Mayo Clinic Proceedings Commencement
Address, May 2005
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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RESOURCES :
Association for Academic Psychiatry
Video Series
http://www.hsc.wvu.edu/aap/
From American Psychiatric Association. Personality disorders. In:
Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders, 4th.
ed., text revision. Washington, D.C.: American Psychiatric
Association, 2000:685-729
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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ELIAS ZERHOUNI, MD, DIRECTOR, NIH :
“We need to understand more about human
behavior. What is it about humans that they do
things they know they shouldn’t do? What makes
it possible for us to smoke, eat a poor diet, and not
exercise, knowing full well that all this is harmful?
Research on human behavior will need to be done
during the next 10 to 15 years.”
Commencement Address
Mayo Clinic School of Medicine
May 2005
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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DEFENITION OF PERSONALITY DISORDER (PD) :
Chronic pattern of inner experience and behavior that is inflexible
and presents across a broad range of situations
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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INTRODUCTION TO THE PERSONALITY DISORDERS
- FROM Association for Academic Psychiatry
Video Series
http://www.hsc.wvu.edu/aap/
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Regina General Hospital
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VIDEO CLIP OF 10 PERSONALITY DISORDERS
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Regina General Hospital
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KEY PRINCIPLES :
PD are not diseases
PD are dynamic systems
Personality exists as a continuum
Personality pathogenesis is not linear
PD can be assessed but not definitively diagnosed
Require strategically planned and combined modes of tactical
intervention
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Regina General Hospital
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OVERVIEW :
Coded on DSM-IV axis II –
Personality disorders
Personality traits
Mental retardation
Separate axis exists to ensure that appropriate attention is paid to
these clinically significant disorders when a comprehensive
psychiatric assessment is performed
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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OVERVIEW :
Lifetime P in general population : 10 to 13 %.
P in primary care outpatient settings : 20 to 30 %
Poorer treatment outcomes and health status / higher rates of
health care use and costs in patients with co morbid personality
disorders
Many patients with whom physicians experience problematic
relationships, and who have been referred to in the literature as
patients who are "difficult" have personality disorders
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Regina General Hospital
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OVERVIEW :
Style of engagement may be inappropriate to the situation
Distant
Hostile
Overly intimate
Seductive
Anxious
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Regina General Hospital
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OVERVIEW :
Interpersonal behavior of patient may elicit strong emotional
reactions in physician
Unrealistic expectations for the physician's:
Availability
Time
Ability to help the patient
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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OVERVIEW :
Medical and psychiatric illnesses may present in an atypical
fashion, and may not respond as expected to treatment
Reactions to illness may exacerbate and intensify the patient's
personality characteristics, further hampering his or her ability to
obtain proper care
The patient's insight into the presence of these disorders is
usually limited or absent
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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OVERVIEW :
Axis I psychiatric disorders can present with patterns of
symptoms similar to those of a personality disorder
These symptoms usually have an identifiable onset, and remit
or improve with appropriate treatment
Most efforts focus on maintaining and supporting the physicianpatient relationship and establishing a working alliance
Goal is to ensure that the patient is able to receive appropriate
medical care despite the difficulty he or she may have in
interacting with the physician and the health care system
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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DDX OF PD SYMPTOMS OR CHANGE IN
PERSONALITY :
Adjustment reaction
Axis I psychiatric disorder
Central nervous system disorder
Medical disorder
Medication use
Substance abuse or dependence
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Regina General Hospital
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PD CLUSTERS :
A – “WEIRD”
B – “WILD”
C – “WORRIED”
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Regina General Hospital
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CONTENT :
PART I
Cluster A PD (Paranoid, Schizoid, Schizotypal)
Cluster C PD (Avoidant, OC, Dependant)
Narcissistic DP
Histrionic
Antisocial PD
PART II
Borderline PD
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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PART I :
Cluster A PD (Paranoid, Schizoid, Schizotypal)
Cluster C PD (Avoidant, OC, Dependant)
Narcissistic DP
Histrionic
Antisocial PD
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CLUSTER A : OVERVIEW
Paranoid – Schizoid - Schizotypal
Often referred to as the "schizophrenic spectrum cluster"
Do not respond appropriately to affective cues from the physician
Are unable to form connections on a basic emotional level
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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PARANOID PD :
Verbs used to describe …
Distrust
Suspicion
Heightened sense of fear / vulnerability
Fear physician may harm / arguments / conflict
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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PARANOID PD :
Physician should …
Adopt a professional stance
Provide clear explanations
Be empathetic to fears
Avoid direct challenge to paranoid ideation
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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PARANOID PD :
Mistrust of Friends
Doubts the loyalty or trustworthiness of
friends or associates
Bearing Grudges
Bears grudges; seldom forgives others’
mistakes
Feeling Victimized
Feels exploited or victimized; seldom
expresses gratitude
Healthy people trust their friends, are forgiving,
and freely express praise and gratitude.
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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PARANOID PD :
Historically, all of the world’s most
murderous leaders exhibited
Paranoid Personality Disorder
Mistrust of Friends
Bearing Grudges
They promoted a culture of fear in
which no one was trusted
They promoted hatred of a
common “enemy” to gain political
power
Feeling Victimized
They convinced their followers that
they were the “victims” of a global
conspiracy of evil
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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PARANOID PD :
Paranoia Cycles Out Of Control
Feeling victimized by an imaginary “villain”
leads to …
Wanting revenge against the imaginary
“villain” which leads to …
A preemptive attack against the imaginary
“villain” which leads to …
A defensive counter-attack from the injured
party which leads to …
Feeling more victimized
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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PARANOID PD :
Paranoia Has Killed Millions
Leaders with Paranoid
Personality Disorder eventually
destroy millions of innocent
civilians:
Mao Tse-Tung brought about the
death of more than 70 million
people – during peacetime
Hitler brought about the Holocaust
which killed 6 million Jews and
millions of other innocent minorities
Stalin brought about the death of
20-60 million people as a direct
result of his tyrannical rule
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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SCHIZOID PD :
Verbs used to describe …
Emotional restriction
Social detachment
Anxiety because of forced contact with others
Delay seeking care
Appear unappreciative
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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SCHIZOID PD :
Physician should …
Adopt a professional stance
Provide clear explanations
Avoid over involvement in personal
and social issues
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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SCHIZOTYPAL PD :
Verbs used to describe …
Odd beliefs and behavior
Socially isolative
Odd interpretations of illness
Anxiety because of forced contact with others
Delay seeking care
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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SCHIZOTYPAL PD :
Physician should …
Adopt a professional stance
Provide clear explanations
Tolerate odd beliefs and behaviors
Avoid over-involvement in personal and social issues
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CLUSTER A TARGET S/S :
Cognitive distortions
Perceptual distortions
Thought disorder
Interpersonal mistrust and distance
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CLUSTER A TARGET S/S TX :
ATYPICAL ANTIPSYCHOTIC
+/- SSRI
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CLUSTER C : OVERVIEW
Avoidant – OC - Dependant
All patients exhibit anxiety in some form
Caused by fears of evaluation by others, abandonment, or loss of
order
Uncomfortable ideas/sensations cause distress & interfere with
functioning within the physician-patient relationship
Physician must use appropriate strategies to help allay this
anxiety and establish an effective working relationship with these
patients
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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AVOIDANT PD :
Verbs used to describe …
Social inhibition due to fears of rejection or
humiliation
Heightened sense of inadequacy
Low self-esteem
Withholds information
Avoids questioning or disagreeing with physician
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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AVOIDANT PD :
Physician should …
Provide reassurance
Validate concerns
Encourage reporting of symptoms and concerns
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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OBSESSIVE-COMPULSIVE :
Verbs used to describe …
Preoccupation with orderliness, perfection,
control
Fear of losing control of bodily functions
and emotions
Fear of relinquishing control
Excessive questioning and attention to details
Anger about disruption of routines
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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OBSESSIVE-COMPULSIVE :
Physician should …
Complete thorough history and
examinations
Provide thorough explanations
Do not overemphasize uncertainty
Encourage patient participation in treatment
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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DEPENDANT :
Verbs used to describe …
Excessive need to be taken care of
Submissive/clinging behavior/fear of abandonment
Helplessness
Urgent demands for attention
Prolongation of illness behavior to obtain attention and care
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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DEPENDANT :
Physician should …
Provide reassurance
Schedule regular check-ups
Set realistic limits on availability
Enlist others to support patient
Avoid rejection of patient
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CLUSTER C TARGET S/S :
Anxiety
Behavioral Inhibition
Obsessional Thinking
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Regina General Hospital
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CLUSTER C TARGET S/S TX :
ANTI-DEPRESSANTS
BZ FOR CONTROL OF SHORT-TERM S/S
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CLUSTER B : OVERVIEW
Narcissistic – Histrionic – Antisocial - Borderline
Can be among the most challenging patients encountered in
clinical settings
Can be excessively demanding, manipulative, emotionally
unstable, and interpersonally inappropriate
May attempt to create relationships that cross professional
boundaries
Can place physicians in difficult or compromising positions
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CLUSTER B : OVERVIEW
Physicians often experience strong emotional reactions to these
patients
Physicians must be keenly aware of the issues of manipulative
behavior, professional boundaries, limit setting, and monitoring
their own emotional state
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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NARCISSISTIC :
Verbs used to describe …
Grandiosity, Need for Admiration, Attitude
of entitlement
Lack of empathy
Anxiety caused by doubts of personal adequacy
Demanding / Denial of illness
Alternating praise and devaluation of physician
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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NARCISSISTIC :
Physicians should …
Validate concerns
Give attentive and factual responses to
questions
Channel patient's skills into dealing with illness
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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NARCISSISTIC :
Healthy people are humble,
democratic, and unselfish.
Three behaviors form core of NPD:
Arrogance
Is arrogant or proud; feels
superior to others
Domineering Behavior
Is domineering or dictatorial;
has a bossy way of ordering
others around
Greed
Is selfishly greedy; wants to
possess much more than what
he/she needs or deserves
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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NARCISSISTIC LEADERS :
Historically, many tyrants
exhibited Narcissistic
Personality Disorder:
Arrogance
Domineering Behavior
They were dictatorial and
autocratic
Greed
They were very arrogant and
proud
They monopolized their nation’s
power and wealth
Usually exhibit both Paranoid
and Narcissistic PD.
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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HISTRIONIC :
Verbs used to describe …
Excessive attention-seeking behavior
Emotionality Threatened sense of
attractiveness and self-esteem
Overly dramatic / Somatization
Attention-seeking behavior
Inability to focus on facts and details
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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HISTRIONIC :
Physician should …
Avoid excessive familiarity
Show professional concern for feelings
Emphasize objective issues
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Regina General Hospital
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ANTISOCIAL :
Verbs used to describe …
Disregards rights of others
Anger
Entitlement masking fear
Impulsive behavior
Deceit, manipulative
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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ANTISOCIAL :
Physicians should …
Carefully investigate concerns and motives
Communicate in a clear and
non-punitive manner
Set clear limits
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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ANTISOCIAL :
Healthy people are tolerant,
responsible, honest, and don’t
unethically exploit others
Three behaviors form the core of
APD:
Intolerance
Is judgmental or prejudiced;
doesn’t respect the beliefs
and practices of others
Irresponsibility or Dishonesty
Doesn’t take responsibility for
own actions; is dishonest; lies,
cheats, or steals
Manipulativeness
Selfishly or unethically
manipulates others for his/her
own advantage
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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ANTISOCIAL LEADERS :
Historically, the most ruthless world
leaders had Antisocial Personality
Disorder:
Intolerance
Persecuted their minorities
and permitted genocides
Irresponsibility or Dishonesty
They habitually lied to their
citizens as their friends
looted their nation’s wealth
Manipulativeness
They constantly manipulated
others for their own unethical
advantage
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CLUSTER B1 TARGET S/S :
Depression
Interpersonal Sensitivity
Impulsivity
Aggression
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CLUSTER B1 TARGET S/S TX :
ANTI-DEPRESSANTS
+/- MOOD STABILIZER
+/- ATYPICAL ANTIPSYCHOTIC
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CLUSTER B2 TARGET S/S :
Mood lability
Impulsivity
Aggression
FHx Bipolar Spectrum D/O
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CLUSTER B2 TARGET S/S TX :
MOOD STABILIZER
+/- ANTI-DEPRESSANT
+/- ATYPICAL ANTIPSYCHOTIC
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CLUSTER B3 TARGET S/S :
Paranoia
Psychosis
Hostility
Overwhelming Anxiety
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CLUSTER B3 TARGET S/S TX :
ATYPICAL ANTI-PSYCHOTIC
+/- ANTI-DEPRESSANT
+/- MOOD STABILIZER
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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PART II :
Borderline PD
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CORE CLINICAL FEATURES :
Pervasive pattern of :
Instability of interpersonal relationships
Instability of affect
Instability of self-image
Marked impulsivity beginning in early
childhood
Severe and persistent enough to result in clinically significant
impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of
functioning
Severely impaired capacity for attachment
Predictably maladaptive behavior in response to separation
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CORE CLINICAL FEAURES :
Very sensitive to abandonment
Inappropriate rage
Unfair accusations
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CORE CLINICAL FEAURES :
Self-mutilation or suicidal
behaviors
Relationships are unstable,
intense, and stormy
Views of others may suddenly and dramatically shift
Alternating between extremes of idealization and
devaluation, or seeing others as beneficent and nurturing
and then as cruel, punitive, and rejecting
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CORE CLINICAL FEATURES :
Impulsive in :
Spending money irresponsibly
Gambling
Engaging in unsafe sexual behavior
Abusing drugs or alcohol
Driving recklessly
Binge eating
Self-mutilation (e.g., cutting or burning)
Unstable self-image
Chronic feelings of emptiness
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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CORE CLINICAL FEATURES :
Inappropriate, intense anger
Difficulty controlling anger during periods
of extreme stress (e.g., perceived or actual abandonment)
May experience transient paranoid ideation
or severe dissociative symptoms
(e.g., depersonalization)
Recurrent suicidal behaviors, gestures, or threats
Affective instability
Marked mood reactivity (e.g., intense episodic dysphoria, irritability,
or anxiety
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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ASSOCIATED FEATURES :
Transient psychotic-like symptoms @
times of stress
Usually last for minutes or hours
Generally of insufficient duration or
severity to warrant an additional
diagnosis
Tendency to undermine themselves when a goal is about to be
reached (e.g., severely regressing after a discussion of how well
therapy is going).
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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ASSOCIATED FEATURES :
Individuals with this disorder may feel
more secure with transitional objects
(e.g., a pet or inanimate object) rather than
with interpersonal relationships
Physical and sexual abuse, neglect,
hostile conflict, and early parental loss or separation are more
common in the childhood histories of those with borderline
personality disorder than in those without the disorder
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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COMORBID CONDITIONS :
Commonly co-occurring Axis I disorders :
Mood disorders
Substance-related disorders
Eating disorders (notably bulimia)
PTSD
Panic disorder
ADHD
Commonly co-occurring axis II disorders :
Antisocial
Avoidant
Histrionic
Narcissistic
Schizotypal
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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COMORBID CONDITIONS :
BPD vs Bipolar D/O :
In BPD, the mood swings are often
triggered by interpersonal stressors
(e.g., rejection), and a particular mood
is usually less sustained than in
bipolar disorder
BPD vs MDD :
Depressive features that appear particularly characteristic of
borderline personality disorder are emptiness, self-condemnation,
abandonment fears, self-destructiveness, and hopelessness
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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COMORBID CONDITIONS :
BPD vs Dysthymic Disorder :
Chronic dysphoria is very
common in individuals
with borderline personality disorder
Presence of the aforementioned
affective features (e.g., mood
swings triggered by interpersonal
stressors) should prompt consideration of the diagnosis of
BPD
Other features of BPD (e.g., identity disturbance, chronic selfdestructive behaviors, frantic efforts to avoid abandonment)
are generally not characteristic of axis I mood disorders
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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COMORBID CONDITIONS :
BPD vs PTSD :
Hx of trauma often characteristic of
patients with BPD and does not
necessarily warrant an additional
diagnosis of PTSD
PTSD should be diagnosed only when
full criteria for the disorder are met
PTSD is characterized by rapid-onset
symptoms that occur, usually in adulthood,
in reaction to exposure to a recognizable and extreme
stressor; in contrast, borderline personality disorder consists
of the early-onset, enduring personality traits described earlier
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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COMORBID CONDITIONS :
BPD vs DID :
DID is characterized by the
presence of two or more distinct
identities or personality states that
alternate, manifesting different
patterns of behavior
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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EPIDEMIOLOGY :
Most common personality disorder in clinical
settings
Present in :
10% of individuals seen in outpatient MHC
15%–20% of psychiatric inpatients
30%–60% of clinical populations with a
personality disorder
2% of the general population
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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EPIDEMIOLOGY :
Present in cultures around the world
Approximately five times more
common among first-degree
biological relatives of
those with the disorder than in the
general population
Greater familial risk for substance-related disorders, antisocial
personality disorder, and mood disorders
Diagnosed predominantly in women (gender ratio 3:1)
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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COMPLICATIONS :
Notable distress / Functional impairment
Majority attempt suicide
Completed suicide occurs in 10% of pts
50 times higher than in the general population.
Risk highest when pts. are 20s as well
as in presence of co-occurring MD/Substance-Related
Disorders
Difficulty with occupational, academic, or role functioning
Recurrent job loss and interrupted education are common
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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COMPLICATIONS :
Difficulties in relationships, as well
as divorce
Social cost for patients with BPD and their
families is substantial
•
May gradually attain functional roles
10–15 years after admission to
psychiatric facilities
Still only about one-half will have stable,
full-time employment or stable marriages
Greater lifetime utilization of most major categories of medication
and of most types of psychotherapy than do patients with
Schizotypal, Avoidant, OC PD or patients with MDD
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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BORDERLINE PD :
Physician should …
Avoid excessive familiarity
Schedule regular visits
Provide clear, nontechnical explanations
Tolerate angry outbursts, but set limits
Maintain awareness of personal feelings
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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BAD WORLD LEADERS :
Historically, the worst world
leaders had a combination of
APD + NPD + PPD
Their behavior exhibited:
Pathological mistrust
Lack of forgiveness
Feeling constantly the
“victim”
Arrogance / Greed
Dictatorial behavior
Intolerance / Dishonesty
Manipulativeness
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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PERSONALITY DISORDERS
GEORGE W. BUSH :
DR. B. Al-Saigh
Regina General Hospital
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