Personality disorder Flashcards

1
Q

Name 2 unhealthy coping mechanims taken up by those with EUPD.

A

Splitting - primitive way of dealing with ambiguity; objects and/or self are either wholly good or wholly bad, aspects of self are split off.

Projection - intolerable feelings/aspects of self are “externalised” to reduce anxiety; projected onto others; projected into others (e.g. thinking that a good part of you has entered someone else and you cannot live without them)

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2
Q

Define personality.

A

the range of characteristic behavioural responses that a person deploys in order to negotiate the challenges produced by the outside world + their internal feelings

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3
Q

Define personality disorder.

A

A series of maladaptive personality traits that interfere with normal function in life.

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4
Q

How common are personality disorders?

A

It is thought that around 1 in 20 people have a personality disorder.

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5
Q

What are the 4 components of personality?

A
  • cognition,
  • impulse control,
  • social communication
  • affect/emotions

These are CONTINUOUS but psychiatrists assign cut-offs indicating when they become abnormal.

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6
Q

What are the risk factors for personality disorder?

A

Biological:

  • Genetics –> Twin studies have shown that personality disorders share a large genetic component

Psychological:

  • Personality –> Higher association with low self-esteem who internalise their stresses

Social:

  • Childhood –> Sexual and emotional abuse and insecure family relationships (greatest risk factor)
  • Neglect as a child affects the largest area of domains
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7
Q

What are the 5 criteria that should be fulfilled to diagnose a personality disorder?

A

A personality disorder is where one or more of these components of personality has reached an abnormal level:

  1. The trait has to be pathological, pervasive and persistent (3P’s)
  2. It must lead to stereotyped responses which can be traced to childhood
  3. The trait should be quantitatively significantly different from others of a similar background (beyond cut off)
  4. It should lead to distress or impair social function for the patient
  5. It should not be due to another mental disorder or medical condition
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8
Q

What are 5 of the diagnostic criteria for EUPD?

A
  • Intense interpersonal relationships which alternate between love and hate
  • Huge fear of abandonment
    • Difficulty controlling temper (temper tantrums)
  • Unstable affect
  • Quasi psychotic thoughts
  • Recurrent suicidal behaviour –> often as a poor coping response to stressful events
    • Impulsive behaviour in 2 different domains (sex, gambling, drugs)
  • Persistent feeling of emptiness and low mood
  • Unstable image of self
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9
Q

What is the aetiology of BPD/EUPD?

A

Things you learn as a child and where they go wrong in EUPD:

  1. Secure attachment - not experienced in childhood so they later form relationships which are very doubtful/jealous. They later form fast intense relationships which do not last as they are insecure.
  2. Distress tolerance - did not learn to manage their emotions appropriately and instead threw temper tantrums. They later engage in unhelpful behaviours like self-harm.
  3. Emotional literacy - don’t learn to be aware of their emotions and react inappropriately in social situations.
  4. Self-identity - no stable sense of their own identity is developed in adolescence
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10
Q

Compare and contrast BPD and BAD.

A

EUPD/BPD:

  • Usually always a history of child abuse
  • Emotions associated with life events
  • Impulsivity is a chronic complaint
  • Mood changes occur suddenly, from low to agitated and vice versa amidst pervasive low mood

BAD (bipolar affective disorder):

  • Not always linked to child abuse
  • Depression/Mania not related to life events
  • Impulsivity only seen during a manic or depressive phase
  • Distinct phases of depression and mania with euthymia in between
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11
Q

What are the two types of EUPD?

A

Borderline = Very emotionally unstable with repeated acts of self-harm

Impulsive = Display high impulsive behaviours (gambling) without the repeated acts of self-harm

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12
Q

What are the three personality clusers? Give 2 examples in each cluster.

A

“Mad, bad, sad”

Cluster A - ‘odd or eccentric’

  • Paranoid
  • Schizoid
  • Schizotypal

Cluster B - ‘dramatic, emotional, or erratic’

  • Antisocial
  • Borderline (Emotionally Unstable)
  • Histrionic
  • Narcissistic

Cluster C - ‘anxious and fearful’

  • Obsessive-Compulsive
  • Avoidant
  • Dependent
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13
Q

What are the main features of paranoid personality disorder?

A
  • Hypersensitivity and an unforgiving attitude when insulted
  • Unwarranted tendency to questions the loyalty of friends
  • Reluctance to confide in others
  • Preoccupation with conspirational beliefs and hidden meaning
  • Unwarranted tendency to perceive attacks on their character
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14
Q

What are the main features of schizoid personality disorder?

A
  • Indifference to praise and criticism
  • Preference for solitary activities
  • Lack of interest in sexual interactions
  • Lack of desire for companionship
  • Emotional coldness
  • Few interests
  • Few friends or confidants other than family
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15
Q

What are the main features of schizotypal personality disorder?

A
  • Ideas of reference* (differ from delusions in that some insight is retained)
  • Odd beliefs and magical thinking
  • Unusual perceptual disturbances
  • Paranoid ideation and suspiciousness
  • Odd, eccentric behaviour
  • Lack of close friends other than family members
  • Inappropriate affect
  • Odd speech without being incoherent

*the false belief that irrelevant occurrences or details in the world relate directly to oneself

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16
Q

What are the main features of antisocial personality disorder?

A

More common in men

  • Failure to conform to social norms with respect to law
  • Deception, use of aliases, or conning others for personal profit or pleasure;
  • Impulsiveness or failure to plan ahead;
  • Irritability and aggressiveness, repeated physical fights or assaults;
  • Reckless disregard for the safety of self or others;
  • Irresponsibility, failure to sustain consistent work behaviour or honour financial obligations;
  • Lack of remorse, indifferent to or rationalizing having hurt, mistreated, or stolen from another
17
Q

What are the main features of histrionic personality disorder?

A
  • Inappropriate sexual seductiveness
  • Need to be the centre of attention
  • Rapidly shifting and shallow expression of emotions
  • Suggestibility
  • Physical appearance used for attention seeking purposes
  • Impressionistic speech lacking detail
  • Self dramatization
  • Relationships considered to be more intimate than they are
18
Q

What are the main features of narcissistic personality disorder?

A
  • Grandiose sense of self importance
  • Preoccupation with fantasies of unlimited success, power, or beauty
  • Sense of entitlement
  • Taking advantage of others to achieve own needs
  • Lack of empathy
  • Excessive need for admiration
  • Chronic envy
  • Arrogant and haughty attitude
19
Q

What are the main features of obsessive-compulsive personality disorder?

A
  • Occupied with details, rules, organization etc to the point that the key part of activity is gone
  • Perfectionism that hampers with completing tasks
  • Extremely dedicated to work and efficiency
  • Meticulous, scrupulous, and rigid about etiquettes of morality, ethics, or values
  • Not capable of disposing worn out or insignificant things even with no sentimental meaning
  • Is unwilling to pass on tasks or work
  • Takes on a stingy spending style towards self and others; and shows stiffness and stubbornnes
20
Q

What are the main features of avoidant personality disorder?

A
  • Avoidance of activities which involve high interpersonal contact due to fears of criticism, or rejection.
  • Unwillingness to be involved unless certain of being liked
  • Preoccupied with ideas that they are being criticised or rejected in social situations
  • Restraint in intimate relationships due to the fear of being ridiculed
  • Reluctance to take personal risks due to fears of embarrassment
  • Views self as inept and inferior to others
  • Social isolation accompanied by a craving for social contact
21
Q

What are the main features of dependent personality disorder?

A
  • Difficulty making everyday decisions without excessive reassurance from others
  • Need for others to assume responsibility for major areas of their life
  • Difficulty in expressing disagreement with others due to fears of losing support
  • Lack of initiative
  • Unrealistic fears of being left to care for themselves
  • Urgent search for another relationship as a source of care and support when a close relationship ends
  • Extensive efforts to obtain support from others
  • Unrealistic feelings that they cannot care for themselves
22
Q

What types of therapies may be used for personality disorders in general?

A
  1. Dialectical behavioural therapy (DBT)
  2. Cognitive analytical therapy (CAT)
  3. CBT
  4. Mentalisation
  5. Therapeutic communities - teaching skills or housing placements for groups of people with complex psychosocial conditions
  6. Psychodynamic and psychoanalytical psychotherapy

Most approaches are related to CBT and psychoanalysis

23
Q

What is DBT? What are two important concepts in DBT?

A

Dialectical behavioural therapy = type of CBT that has been adapted for people who experience emotions very intensely e.g. in EUPD. Focuses on changing unhelpful behaviours AND accepting who you are at the same time

Two main concepts are introduced:

  1. Validation: accepting that your emotions are acceptable
  2. Dialectics: showing you that things in life are rarely black or white, and helping you be open to ideas and opinions that contradict your own

NB: ‘Dialectical’ means trying to understand how two things that seem opposite could both be true. For example, accepting yourself and changing your behaviour might feel contradictory. But DBT teaches that it’s possible for you to achieve both these goals together.

24
Q

What is mentalisation based therapy?

A

Mentalisation = ability to think about thinking (examining your own thoughts and assessing them based on reality). It teaches you…

  • how to take a step back and scrutinise your thoughts and impulses
  • how to recognise other peoples’ thought patterns and accept that your interpretation may not be correct

Lasts ~18 months.

25
Q

What is 1st line for EUPD?

A

DBT

26
Q

Which medications may be used in personality disorders?

A

Antipsychotics - may reduce impulsivity and aggression (e.g. risperidone)

Antidepressants - may reduce impulsivity and anxiety

Mood stabilisers - may be used for labile affect (effects aren’t evidence-based)

27
Q

What are the other important parts of management for personality disorders?

A

Treat comorbid problems e.g. substance misuse, affective and anxiety disorders, insomnia

Provide contact numbers for:

  • CMHT nurse
  • out-of-hour social worker
  • local crisis resolution team

Art therapies - may be useful for those who struggle to express their feelings verbally

Further support: mind.co.uk

28
Q

What is the prognosis with personality disorders?

A

In the past have been considered ‘untreatable’ by definition.. However, a number of approaches have been shown to help patients. May change over time.

29
Q

What is the main trait of each of these personality disorders? What is their origin?

  • Paranoid Personality Disorder
  • Schizotypal Personality Disorder
  • Schizoid Personality Disorder
A

Paranoid - Trait: impaired ability to form relationships/confide in others; Origin: It stems from impaired trust in relationships, giving constant suspicion

Schizotypal - Trait: impaired cognition, which leads to odd thinking and perceptual abnormalities; Origin: Stems from disorganised thinking (like semi-psychosis)

Schizoid - Trait: Impaired social communication, which leads to insensitivity to social norms; Origin: Stems from emotional coldness

30
Q

What is the main trait of each of these personality disorders? What is their origin?

  • Antisocial/Dissocial Personality Disorder
  • Avoidant/Anxious Personality Disorder
  • Dependent Personality Disorder
A

Antisocial - Trait: impaired impulse control, leading to high aggressiveness and insensitivity; Origin: from complete disregard for social norms, much more common in men

Avoidant/Anxious - Trait: impaired emotional confidence, leading to high anxiety and tension in relationships; Origin: from fear of criticism or rejection from others

Dependent - Trait: impaired emotional confidence, giving submissive and clinging behaviour; Origin: Stems from fear of criticism or rejection from others

31
Q

What is the main trait of each of these personality disorders? What is their origin?

  • Histrionic Personality Disorder
  • Obsessive-Compulsive/Anakastic Personality Disorder
  • Narcissistic Personality Disorder (DSM only)
A

Histrionic - Trait: impaired self-confidence, leading to extroverted behaviour to gain attention; Origin: from a need to be the centre of attention

Obsessive-Compulsive/Anakastic - Trait: excessive perfectionism, giving highly stereotyped behaviours with poor flexibility; Origin: from pervasive pursuit of efficiency, at the expense of other leisurely activities

Narcissistic - Trait: impaired sense of self which leads to a perceived self-importance; Origin: from a constant need for admiration from others

32
Q

Paranoid Personality Disorder

Schizotypal Personality Disorder

A