Personality Disorders Continued
Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.
Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder
-
Similarities to Negativistic p.d. ( the old passive-aggressive p.d. lavel)
-
Common themes include ambivalent & conflicted personality dynamics that underlie presentation.
-
Ambivalence is defined as a lack of certainty over the source of reinforcement in one’s life.
-
Ambivalent individuals = conflicted over whether they should follow what others want them to do or follow their own needs and wishes.
-
“Anxious – fearful” cluster with anxiety & tension prominent symptoms.
-
OCPD: extreme rigidity, preoccupation with details & perfectionism.
-
Interpersonal relationships lacking – seen as cold, distant, & authoritarian. They have an excessive need to control others.
-
The issue with subordinate relationships.
-
Little motivation to become more flexible.
-
OCPD: avoids unwelcome thoughts or impulses & frequently distracts them by becoming unduly critical and judgmental of others.
-
Rigid, perfectionist, & restricted emotional expressivity.
-
Millon: intense ambivalence as the central feature.
Prevalence
-
5-20% psychiatric patients
-
Comorbidity: paranoid, histrionic, borderline, narcissistic, and avoidant p.d.
-
Issues with OCD Axis I.
Historically
-
Psychoanalytic theory: intense conflict during the anal stage of psychosexual development = “anal character”.
-
Kraft-Ebing: “compulsion” = constricted thought processes in individuals with severe depression. Then began to use the term to indicate hidden emotions, incessant questioning, doubtfulness, & other characteristics.
-
Anakastic (Schneider, 1923) = conceal feelings of insecurity, compensates by adopting an overly correct or scrupulous demeanor, & uses control in most relationships.
-
Kretschmer = “sensitive” personality type.
-
Kahn (1931) ambivalent tendencies = “ambitendency”.
-
Reich (1949) extreme attention to order, circumstantiality, rumination, indecision, self-doubt.
-
Contemporary Theories
-
Psychoanalytic: struggles over autonomy
-
Erikson (1950): gain autonomy over one’s self & environment.
-
Rado (1959) mother’s demandingness & intrusiveness into child’s bowel patterns = defiance and anger.
-
Mallinger (1984) parental rejection, authoritarian attitudes, & lack of respect for privacy.
-
Salzman (1980) & Storr (1980) pervasive threat to security.
-
Behaviorial: very little in the literature.
-
Issues with the term OCPD.
-
Turkat & Maistro (1985): learns maladaptive emotional reactions in home & emphasizes hard work & minimizes close interpersonal relationships.
-
Cognitive Theory: Beck & Freeman (1990): OCPD clear distortions in thinking = produce rigidity & perfectionism.
-
Cognitive disortions
-
Musts and shoulds
-
Interpersonal Theory: Leary (1959) OCPD style defined by actions that maintain conventionality and security.
-
Structural Analysis of Social Behavior (Benjamin, 1974): intense fears of making a mistake / being viewed as imperfect.
-
Endler & Edwards (1988)
-
Pincus & Wiggins (1990)
-
Biological perspective: limited attention
-
Issues with anxiety.
-
Clonginger’s (1987) neurobiological theory – novelty seeking, reward dependence, harm avoidance.
-
Millon & Davis (1996) limbic system.
-
Integrative Model: Millon (1996)
-
Issues with Negativistic P.D.: stubbornness, passive resistance to fulfilling routine demands, procrastination, and inefficiency. Also sullen & irritable.
Borderline Personality Disorder
Essential Symptoms:
-
Impulsivity
-
Affective Instability
-
Cognitive Symptoms
Reliability & Validity Concerns
Prevalence
-
1-2% general population
-
¾ women. Why? Stone (1993)
Comorbidity
-
Axis I mood disorders. Is it a form of depression?
-
Gunderston & Phillips (1991)
-
Trauma research: Kolk (1987)
-
The “borderline child”
-
Remits by early middle age.
-
15 years = 75%
-
1/10 commits suicide.
-
Highest risk: substance abuse + borderline
-
Stone (1993) less likely to marry or have children
Historically
-
Problems with the term “borderline”
-
Adolf Stern (1938)
-
“hysteria” or “pseudo-neurotic schizophrenia”
-
unstable personality disorder or emotionally unstable personality
Contemporary Theories
-
Biological: relatives have impulse spectrum disorders and/or affective disorders.
-
No specific pattern of inheritance has been found.
-
Torgersen (1984) twin studies – no MZ-DZ differences, but numbers small.
-
Torgersen (1996) BPD large heritable component.
-
No adoption studies.
-
No identifiable biological markers yet to be found. Similar markers to depression, e.g. abnormal REM latency; serotonergic activity.
-
Soft neurological signs, e.g. limbic activity issues.
-
Siever & Davis (1991)
-
Most likely = multiple receptors & multiple subsystems associated with each NT.
-
Linehan (1993) “emotional vulnerability”.
-
Psychological Factors: psychoanalytic emphasis on early experience.
-
Large number of negative events in childhood.
-
Borderlines also report a high frequency of childhood sexual abuse, e.g. 50-70%.
-
Incest abuse with penetration.
-
Physical abuse, frequency, duration, & severity.
-
Gender issues.
-
Herman et al (1989)
-
Zanarini et al (1989)
-
Van der Kolk et al (1991) & self-mutilation
-
Separation & loss b/f 16 (51%)
-
Parental psychopathology
-
Parental bonding issues; Gunderson et al (1980)
-
Adler (1985)
-
Linehan (1993)
Narcissistic Personality Disorder
-
Normal narcissism versus pathological narcissism
-
Definition: “a pervasive pattern of grandiosity, need for admiration, & lack of empathy”
-
Associated features: vulnerable self-esteem, sensitivity, intense reactions of humiliation, emptiness or disdain to criticism or defeat, vocational problems, feelings of shame, social withdrawal.
-
Antisocial or borderline characteristics
-
High achievement, promiscuity, excessive rage, suicidal behavior.
NPD Clinical Features
-
The Arrogant Narcissist
-
The Shy Narcissist
-
NPD with Antisocial / Borderline Features
-
Comorbid Axis I = depression or dysthymia
-
Suicide
-
Affect intolerance and vulnerability
-
Discriminating behaviors: Ronningstam & Gunderston (1990) boastful & pretentious behavior; self-centered & self-referential behavior; reactions to the envy of others.
-
Morey (1998): inflated self-esteem & marked affective reactions to assaults of self-esteem; marked need for interpersonal control; hostility; lack of overtly self-destructive behaviors.
Prevalence
-
2-22%. Gender differences?
-
Late teens & early 20s; middle age very critical.
Sociocultural Factors
Comorbidity
-
Dramatic cluster, e.g. histrionic, borderline, paranoid, avoidant, passive-aggressive, antisocial.
-
Bipolar patients, substance abuse, major depression, anorexia nervosa.
Differential Diagnosis
-
Antisocial p.d.
-
Borderline p.d.
-
Histrionic p.d.
-
Obsessive-Compulsive p.d.
-
Paranoid p.d.
-
Schizoid p.d.
-
Mania & hypomania
Share with your friends: |