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Personality disorder

Personality disorders (PD) are a class of mental disorders characterized by enduring maladaptive patterns of behavior, cognition, and inner experience, exhibited across many contexts and deviating from those accepted by the individual's culture.[1] These patterns develop early, are inflexible, and are associated with significant distress or disability. The definitions vary by source and remain a matter of controversy.[2][3][4] Official criteria for diagnosing personality disorders are listed in the sixth chapter of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) and in the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM).

Personality, defined psychologically, is the set of enduring behavioral and mental traits that distinguish individual humans. Hence, personality disorders are defined by experiences and behaviors that deviate from social norms and expectations. Those diagnosed with a personality disorder may experience difficulties in cognition, emotiveness, interpersonal functioning, or impulse control. For psychiatric patients, the prevalence of personality disorders is estimated between 40 and 60%.[5][6][7] The behavior patterns of personality disorders are typically recognized by adolescence, the beginning of adulthood or sometimes even childhood and often have a pervasive negative impact on the quality of life.[1][8][9]

Treatment for personality disorders is primarily psychotherapeutic. Evidence-based psychotherapies for personality disorders include cognitive behavioral therapy, and dialectical behavior therapy especially for borderline personality disorder.[10][11] A variety of psychoanalytic approaches are also used.[12]

Personality disorders are associated with considerable stigma in popular and clinical discourse alike.[13] Despite various methodological schemas designed to categorize personality disorders, many issues occur with classifying a personality disorder because the theory and diagnosis of such disorders occur within prevailing cultural expectations; thus, their validity is contested by some experts on the basis of inevitable subjectivity. They argue that the theory and diagnosis of personality disorders are based strictly on social, or even sociopolitical and economic considerations.[14]

Classification and symptoms edit

The two latest editions of the major systems of classification are:

The ICD is a collection of alpha-numerical codes which have been assigned to all known clinical states, and provides uniform terminology for medical records, billing, statistics and research. The DSM defines psychiatric diagnoses based on research and expert consensus. Both have deliberately aligned their diagnoses to some extent, but some differences remain. For example, the ICD-10 included narcissistic personality disorder in the group of other specific personality disorders, while DSM-5 does not include enduring personality change after catastrophic experience. The ICD-10 classified the DSM-5 schizotypal personality disorder as a form of schizophrenia rather than as a personality disorder. There are accepted diagnostic issues and controversies with regard to distinguishing particular personality disorder categories from each other.[15] Dissociative identity disorder, previously known as multiple personality as well as multiple personality disorder, has always been classified as a dissociative disorder and never was regarded as a personality disorder.[16]

DSM-5 edit

The most recent fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders stresses that a personality disorder is an enduring and inflexible pattern of long duration leading to significant distress or impairment and is not due to use of substances or another medical condition. The DSM-5 lists personality disorders in the same way as other mental disorders, rather than on a separate 'axis', as previously.[17]

DSM-5 lists ten specific personality disorders: paranoid, schizoid, schizotypal, antisocial, borderline, histrionic, narcissistic, avoidant, dependent and obsessive–compulsive personality disorder.

The DSM-5 also contains three diagnoses for personality patterns not matching these ten disorders, which nevertheless exhibit characteristics of a personality disorder:[18]

  • Personality change due to another medical condition – personality disturbance due to the direct effects of a medical condition
  • Other specified personality disorder – disorder which meets the general criteria for a personality disorder but fails to meet the criteria for a specific disorder, with the reason given
  • Unspecified personality disorder – disorder which meets the general criteria for a personality disorder but is not included in the DSM-5 classification

These specific personality disorders are grouped into the following three clusters based on descriptive similarities:

Cluster A (odd or eccentric disorders) edit

Cluster A personality disorders are often associated with schizophrenia: in particular, schizotypal personality disorder shares some of its hallmark symptoms with schizophrenia, e.g., acute discomfort in close relationships, cognitive or perceptual distortions, and eccentricities of behavior. However, people diagnosed with odd–eccentric personality disorders tend to have a greater grasp on reality than those with schizophrenia. People with these disorders can be paranoid and have difficulty being understood by others, as they often have odd or eccentric modes of speaking and an unwillingness and inability to form and maintain close relationships. Though their perceptions may be unusual, these anomalies are distinguished from delusions or hallucinations as people with these would be diagnosed with other conditions. Significant evidence suggests a small proportion of people with Cluster A personality disorders, especially schizotypal personality disorder, have the potential to develop schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders. These disorders also have a higher probability of occurring among individuals whose first-degree relatives have either schizophrenia or a Cluster A personality disorder.[19]

Cluster B (emotional or erratic disorders) edit

Cluster B personality disorders are characterized by dramatic, impulsive, self-destructive, emotional behavior and sometimes incomprehensible interactions with others.[20]

Cluster C (anxious or fearful disorders) edit

DSM-5 general criteria edit

Both the DSM-5 and the ICD-11 diagnostic systems provide a definition and six criteria for a general personality disorder. These criteria should be met by all personality disorder cases before a more specific diagnosis can be made.

The DSM-5 indicates that any personality disorder diagnosis must meet the following criteria:[18]

  • There is an enduring pattern of inner experience and behavior that deviates markedly from the expectations of the individual's culture. This pattern is manifested in two (or more) of the following areas:
    • Cognition (i.e., ways of perceiving and interpreting self, other people, and events)
    • Affectivity (i.e., the range, intensity, lability, and appropriateness of emotional response)
    • Interpersonal functioning
    • Impulse control
  • The enduring pattern is inflexible and pervasive across a broad range of personal and social situations.
  • The enduring pattern leads to clinically significant distress, or impairment in functioning, in social, occupational, or other important areas.
  • The pattern is stable and of long duration, and its onset can be traced back at least to adolescence or early adulthood.
  • The enduring pattern is not better explained as a manifestation or consequence of another mental disorder.
  • The enduring pattern is not attributable to the physiological effects of a substance (e.g., a drug of abuse, a medication) or another medical condition (e.g., head trauma).

ICD-11 edit

The ICD-11 personality disorder section differs substantially from the previous edition, ICD-10. All distinct PDs have been merged into one: personality disorder (6D10), which can be coded as mild (6D10.0), moderate (6D10.1), severe (6D10.2), or severity unspecified (6D10.Z). There is also an additional category called personality difficulty (QE50.7), which can be used to describe personality traits that are problematic, but do not meet the diagnostic criteria for a PD. A personality disorder or difficulty can be specified by one or more prominent personality traits or patterns (6D11). The ICD-11 uses five trait domains:

  1. Negative affectivity (6D11.0) – including anxiety, separation insecurity, distrustfulness, worthlessness and emotional instability
  2. Detachment (6D11.1) – including social detachment and emotional coldness
  3. Dissociality (6D11.2) – including grandiosity, egocentricity, deception, exploitativeness and aggression
  4. Disinhibition (6D11.3) – including risk-taking, impulsivity, irresponsibility and distractibility
  5. Anankastia (6D11.4) – including rigid control over behaviour and affect and rigid perfectionism

Listed directly underneath is borderline pattern (6D11.5), a category similar to borderline personality disorder. This is not a trait in itself, but a combination of the five traits in certain severity.

In the ICD-11, any personality disorder must meet all of the following criteria:[23]

  • There is an enduring disturbance characterized by problems in functioning of aspects of the self (e.g., identity, self-worth, accuracy of self-view, self-direction), and/or interpersonal dysfunction (e.g., ability to develop and maintain close and mutually satisfying relationships, ability to understand others' perspectives and to manage conflict in relationships).
  • The disturbance has persisted over an extended period of time (e.g., lasting 2 years or more).
  • The disturbance is manifest in patterns of cognition, emotional experience, emotional expression, and behaviour that are maladaptive (e.g., inflexible or poorly regulated).
  • The disturbance is manifest across a range of personal and social situations (i.e., is not limited to specific relationships or social roles), though it may be consistently evoked by particular types of circumstances and not others.
  • The symptoms are not due to the direct effects of a medication or substance, including withdrawal effects, and are not better accounted for by another mental disorder, a disease of the nervous system, or another medical condition.
  • The disturbance is associated with substantial distress or significant impairment in personal, family, social, educational, occupational or other important areas of functioning.
  • Personality disorder should not be diagnosed if the patterns of behaviour characterizing the personality disturbance are developmentally appropriate (e.g., problems related to establishing an independent self-identity during adolescence) or can be explained primarily by social or cultural factors, including socio-political conflict.

ICD-10 edit

The ICD-10 lists these general guideline criteria:[24]

  • Markedly disharmonious attitudes and behavior, generally involving several areas of functioning, e.g. affectivity, arousal, impulse control, ways of perceiving and thinking, and style of relating to others;
  • The abnormal behavior pattern is enduring, of long standing, and not limited to episodes of mental illness;
  • The abnormal behavior pattern is pervasive and clearly maladaptive to a broad range of personal and social situations;
  • The above manifestations always appear during childhood or adolescence and continue into adulthood;
  • The disorder leads to considerable personal distress but this may only become apparent late in its course;
  • The disorder is usually, but not invariably, associated with significant problems in occupational and social performance.

The ICD adds: "For different cultures it may be necessary to develop specific sets of criteria with regard to social norms, rules and obligations."[24]

Chapter V in the ICD-10 contains the mental and behavioral disorders and includes categories of personality disorder and enduring personality changes. They are defined as ingrained patterns indicated by inflexible and disabling responses that significantly differ from how the average person in the culture perceives, thinks, and feels, particularly in relating to others.[25]

The specific personality disorders are: paranoid, schizoid, schizotypal, dissocial, emotionally unstable (borderline type and impulsive type), histrionic, narcissistic, anankastic, anxious (avoidant) and dependent.[26]

Besides the ten specific PD, there are the following categories:

  • Other specific personality disorders (involves PD characterized as eccentric, haltlose, immature, narcissistic, passive–aggressive, or psychoneurotic.)
  • Personality disorder, unspecified (includes "character neurosis" and "pathological personality").
  • Mixed and other personality disorders (defined as conditions that are often troublesome but do not demonstrate the specific pattern of symptoms in the named disorders).
  • Enduring personality changes, not attributable to brain damage and disease (this is for conditions that seem to arise in adults without a diagnosis of personality disorder, following catastrophic or prolonged stress or other psychiatric illness).

Other personality types and Millon's description edit

Some types of personality disorder were in previous versions of the diagnostic manuals but have been deleted. Examples include sadistic personality disorder (pervasive pattern of cruel, demeaning, and aggressive behavior) and self-defeating personality disorder or masochistic personality disorder (characterized by behavior consequently undermining the person's pleasure and goals). They were listed in the DSM-III-R appendix as "Proposed diagnostic categories needing further study" without specific criteria.[27] Psychologist Theodore Millon, a researcher on personality disorders, and other researchers consider some relegated diagnoses to be equally valid disorders, and may also propose other personality disorders or subtypes, including mixtures of aspects of different categories of the officially accepted diagnoses.[28] Millon proposed the following description of personality disorders:

Millon's brief description of personality disorders[28]: 4 
Type of personality disorder DSM-5 inclusion Description
Paranoid yes Guarded, defensive, distrustful and suspicious. Hypervigilant to the motives of others to undermine or do harm. Always seeking confirmatory evidence of hidden schemes. Feel righteous, but persecuted. Experience a pattern of pervasive distrust and suspicion of others that lasts a long time. They are generally difficult to work with and are very hard to form relationships with. They are also known to be argumentative and hypersensitive.[29]
Schizoid yes Apathetic, indifferent, remote, solitary, distant, humorless, contempt, odd fantasies. Neither desire nor need human attachments. Withdrawn from relationships and prefer to be alone. Little interest in others, often seen as a loner. Minimal awareness of the feelings of themselves or others. Few drives or ambitions, if any. Is an uncommon condition in which people avoid social activities and consistently shy away from interaction with others. It affects more males than females. To others, they may appear somewhat dull or humorless. Because they do not tend to show emotion, they may appear as though they do not care about what's going on around them.[30]
Schizotypal yes Eccentric, self-estranged, bizarre, absent. Exhibit peculiar mannerisms and behaviors. Think they can read thoughts of others. Preoccupied with odd daydreams and beliefs. Blur line between reality and fantasy. Magical thinking and strange beliefs. People with schizotypal personality disorder are often described as odd or eccentric and usually have few, if any, close relationships. They think others think negatively of them.[31]
Antisocial yes Impulsive, irresponsible, deviant, unruly. Act without due consideration. Meet social obligations only when self-serving. Disrespect societal customs, rules, and standards. See themselves as free and independent. People with antisocial personality disorder depict a long pattern of disregard for other people's rights. They often cross the line and violate these rights.[32]
Borderline yes Frantic efforts to avoid abandonment. Identity disturbance; unstable sense of self-image or sense of self. Impulsivity — spending, sex, substance abuse, binge eating. Unstable mood; fluctuation between highs and lows. Feelings of emptiness. Ideation and devaluation of interpersonal relationships. Intense or inappropriate anger. Suicidal-behaviour.[33]
Histrionic yes Hysteria, dramatic, seductive, shallow, egocentric, attention-seeking, vain. Overreact to minor events. Exhibitionistic as a means of securing attention and favors. See themselves as attractive and charming. Constantly seeking others' attention. Disorder is characterized by constant attention-seeking, emotional overreaction, and suggestibility. Their tendency to over-dramatize may impair relationships and lead to depression, but they are often high-functioning.[34]
Narcissistic yes Egotistical, arrogant, grandiose, insouciant. Preoccupied with fantasies of success, beauty, or achievement. See themselves as admirable and superior, and therefore entitled to special treatment. Is a mental disorder in which people have an inflated sense of their own importance and a deep need for admiration. Those with narcissistic personality disorder believe that they are superior to others and have little regard for other people's feelings.
Avoidant yes Hesitant, self-conscious, embarrassed, anxious. Tense in social situations due to fear of rejection. Plagued by constant performance anxiety. See themselves as inept, inferior, or unappealing. They experience long-standing feelings of inadequacy and are very sensitive of what others think about them.[35]
Dependent yes Helpless, incompetent, submissive, immature. Withdrawn from adult responsibilities. See themselves as weak or fragile. Seek constant reassurance from stronger figures. They have the need to be taken care of by others. They fear being abandoned or separated from important people in their life.[36]
Obsessive–compulsive yes Restrained, conscientious, respectful, rigid. Maintain a rule-bound lifestyle. Adhere closely to social conventions. See the world in terms of regulations and hierarchies. See themselves as devoted, reliable, efficient, and productive.
Depressive no Somber, discouraged, pessimistic, brooding, fatalistic. Present themselves as vulnerable and abandoned. Feel valueless, guilty, and impotent. Judge themselves as worthy only of criticism and contempt. Hopeless, suicidal, restless. This disorder can lead to aggressive acts and hallucinations.[37]
Passive–aggressive (Negativistic) no Resentful, contrary, skeptical, discontented. Resist fulfilling others' expectations. Deliberately inefficient. Vent anger indirectly by undermining others' goals. Alternately moody and irritable, then sullen and withdrawn. Withhold emotions. Will not communicate when there is something problematic to discuss.[38]
Sadistic no Explosively hostile, abrasive, cruel, dogmatic. Liable to sudden outbursts of rage. Gain satisfaction through dominating, intimidating and humiliating others. They are opinionated and closed-minded. Enjoy performing brutal acts on others. Find pleasure in abusing others. Would likely engage in a sadomasochist relationship, but will not play the role of a masochist. [39]
Self-defeating (Masochistic) no Deferential, pleasure-phobic, servile, blameful, self-effacing. Encourage others to take advantage of them. Deliberately defeat own achievements. Seek condemning or mistreatful partners. They are suspicious of people who treat them well. Would likely engage in a sadomasochist relationship.[40]

Additional factors edit

In addition to classifying by category and cluster, it is possible to classify personality disorders using additional factors such as severity, impact on social functioning, and attribution.[41]

Severity edit

This involves both the notion of personality difficulty as a measure of subthreshold scores for personality disorder using standard interviews and the evidence that those with the most severe personality disorders demonstrate a "ripple effect" of personality disturbance across the whole range of mental disorders. In addition to subthreshold (personality difficulty) and single cluster (simple personality disorder), this also derives complex or diffuse personality disorder (two or more clusters of personality disorder present) and can also derive severe personality disorder for those of greatest risk.

Dimensional system of classifying personality disorders[42]
Level of severity Description Definition by categorical system
0 No personality disorder Does not meet actual or subthreshold criteria for any personality disorder
1 Personality difficulty Meets sub-threshold criteria for one or several personality disorders
2 Simple personality disorder Meets actual criteria for one or more personality disorders within the same cluster
3 Complex (diffuse) personality disorder Meets actual criteria for one or more personality disorders within more than one cluster
4 Severe personality disorder Meets criteria for creation of severe disruption to both individual and to many in society

There are several advantages to classifying personality disorder by severity:[41]

  • It not only allows for but also takes advantage of the tendency for personality disorders to be comorbid with each other.
  • It represents the influence of personality disorder on clinical outcome more satisfactorily than the simple dichotomous system of no personality disorder versus personality disorder.
  • This system accommodates the new diagnosis of severe personality disorder, particularly "dangerous and severe personality disorder" (DSPD).

Effect on social functioning edit

Social function is affected by many other aspects of mental functioning apart from that of personality. However, whenever there is persistently impaired social functioning in conditions in which it would normally not be expected, the evidence suggests that this is more likely to be created by personality abnormality than by other clinical variables.[43] The Personality Assessment Schedule[44] gives social function priority in creating a hierarchy in which the personality disorder creating the greater social dysfunction is given primacy over others in a subsequent description of personality disorder.

Attribution edit

Many who have a personality disorder do not recognize any abnormality and defend valiantly their continued occupancy of their personality role. This group have been termed the Type R, or treatment-resisting personality disorders, as opposed to the Type S or treatment-seeking ones, who are keen on altering their personality disorders and sometimes clamor for treatment.[41] The classification of 68 personality disordered patients on the caseload of an assertive community team using a simple scale showed a 3 to 1 ratio between Type R and Type S personality disorders with Cluster C personality disorders being significantly more likely to be Type S, and paranoid and schizoid (Cluster A) personality disorders significantly more likely to be Type R than others.[45]

Psychoanalytic theory has been used to explain treatment-resistant tendencies as egosyntonic (i.e. the patterns are consistent with the ego integrity of the individual) and are therefore perceived to be appropriate by that individual. In addition, this behavior can result in maladaptive coping skills and may lead to personal problems that induce extreme anxiety, distress, or depression and result in impaired psychosocial functioning.[46]

Presentation edit

Comorbidity edit

There is a considerable personality disorder diagnostic co-occurrence. Patients who meet the DSM-IV-TR diagnostic criteria for one personality disorder are likely to meet the diagnostic criteria for another.[47] Diagnostic categories provide clear, vivid descriptions of discrete personality types but the personality structure of actual patients might be more accurately described by a constellation of maladaptive personality traits.

DSM-III-R personality disorder diagnostic co-occurrence aggregated across six research sites[47]: 1721 
Type of Personality Disorder PPD SzPD StPD ASPD BPD HPD NPD AvPD DPD OCPD PAPD
Paranoid (PPD) 8 19 15 41 28 26 44 23 21 30
Schizoid (SzPD) 38 39 8 22 8 22 55 11 20 9
Schizotypal (StPD) 43 32 19 4 17 26 68 34 19 18
Antisocial (ASPD) 30 8 15 59 39 40 25 19 9 29
Borderline (BPD) 31 6 16 23 30 19 39 36 12 21
Histrionic (HPD) 29 2 7 17 41 40 21 28 13 25
Narcissistic (NPD) 41 12 18 25 38 60 32 24 21 38
Avoidant (AvPD) 33 15 22 11 39 16 15 43 16 19
Dependent (DPD) 26 3 16 16 48 24 14 57 15 22
Obsessive–Compulsive (OCPD) 31 10 11 4 25 21 19 37 27 23
Passive–Aggressive (PAPD) 39 6 12 25 44 36 39 41 34 23

Sites used DSM-III-R criterion sets. Data obtained for purposes of informing the development of the DSM-IV-TR personality disorder diagnostic criteria.

Abbreviations used: PPD – Paranoid Personality Disorder, SzPD – Schizoid Personality Disorder, StPD – Schizotypal Personality Disorder, ASPD – Antisocial Personality Disorder, BPD – Borderline Personality Disorder, HPD – Histrionic Personality Disorder, NPD – Narcissistic Personality Disorder, AvPD – Avoidant Personality Disorder, DPD – Dependent Personality Disorder, OCPD – Obsessive–Compulsive Personality Disorder, PAPD – Passive–Aggressive Personality Disorder.

The disorders in each of the three clusters may share with each other underlying common vulnerability factors involving cognition, affect and impulse control, and behavioral maintenance or inhibition, respectively. But they may also have a spectrum relationship to certain syndromal mental disorders:[47]

Impact on functioning edit

It is generally assumed that all personality disorders are linked to impaired functioning and a reduced quality of life (QoL) because that is a basic diagnostic requirement. But research shows that this may be true only for some types of personality disorder.

In several studies, higher levels of disability and lower QoL were predicted by avoidant, dependent, schizoid, paranoid, schizotypal and antisocial personality disorders. This link is particularly strong for avoidant, schizotypal and borderline PD. However, obsessive–compulsive PD was not related to a reduced QoL or increased impairment. A prospective study reported that all PD were associated with significant impairment 15 years later, except for obsessive compulsive and narcissistic personality disorder.[48]

One study investigated some aspects of "life success" (status, wealth and successful intimate relationships). It showed somewhat poor functioning for schizotypal, antisocial, borderline and dependent PD, schizoid PD had the lowest scores regarding these variables. Paranoid, histrionic and avoidant PD were average. Narcissistic and obsessive–compulsive PD, however, had high functioning and appeared to contribute rather positively to these aspects of life success.[9]

There is also a direct relationship between the number of diagnostic criteria and quality of life. For each additional personality disorder criterion that a person meets there is an even reduction in quality of life.[49] Personality disorders – especially dependent, narcissistic, and sadistic personality disorders – also facilitate various forms of counterproductive work behavior, including knowledge hiding and knowledge sabotage.[50]

Issues edit

In the workplace edit

Depending on the diagnosis, severity and individual, and the job itself, personality disorders can be associated with difficulty coping with work or the workplace—potentially leading to problems with others by interfering with interpersonal relationships. Indirect effects also play a role; for example, impaired educational progress or complications outside of work, such as substance abuse and co-morbid mental disorders, can be problematic. However, personality disorders can also bring about above-average work abilities by increasing competitive drive or causing the individual with the condition to exploit his or her co-workers.[51][52]

In 2005 and again in 2009, psychologists Belinda Board and Katarina Fritzon at the University of Surrey, UK, interviewed and gave personality tests to high-level British executives and compared their profiles with those of criminal psychiatric patients at Broadmoor Hospital in the UK. They found that three out of eleven personality disorders were actually more common in executives than in the disturbed criminals:

According to leadership academic Manfred F.R. Kets de Vries, it seems almost inevitable that some personality disorders will be present in a senior management team.[54]

In children edit

Early stages and preliminary forms of personality disorders need a multi-dimensional and early treatment approach. Personality development disorder is considered to be a childhood risk factor or early stage of a later personality disorder in adulthood.[55] In addition, in Robert F. Krueger's review of their research indicates that some children and adolescents do experience clinically significant syndromes that resemble adult personality disorders, and that these syndromes have meaningful correlates and are consequential. Much of this research has been framed by the adult personality disorder constructs from Axis II of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual. Hence, they are less likely to encounter the first risk they described at the outset of their review: clinicians and researchers are not simply avoiding use of the PD construct in youth. However, they may encounter the second risk they described: under-appreciation of the developmental context in which these syndromes occur. That is, although PD constructs show continuity over time, they are probabilistic predictors; not all youths who exhibit PD symptomatology become adult PD cases.[55]

Versus normal personality edit

The issue of the relationship between normal personality and personality disorders is one of the important issues in personality and clinical psychology. The personality disorders classification (DSM-5 and ICD-10) follows a categorical approach that views personality disorders as discrete entities that are distinct from each other and from normal personality. In contrast, the dimensional approach is an alternative approach that personality disorders represent maladaptive extensions of the same traits that describe normal personality.

Thomas Widiger and his collaborators have contributed to this debate significantly.[56] He discussed the constraints of the categorical approach and argued for the dimensional approach to the personality disorders. Specifically, he proposed the Five Factor Model of personality as an alternative to the classification of personality disorders. For example, this view specifies that Borderline Personality Disorder can be understood as a combination of emotional lability (i.e., high neuroticism), impulsivity (i.e., low conscientiousness), and hostility (i.e., low agreeableness). Many studies across cultures have explored the relationship between personality disorders and the Five Factor Model.[57] This research has demonstrated that personality disorders largely correlate in expected ways with measures of the Five Factor Model[58] and has set the stage for including the Five Factor Model within DSM-5.[59]

In clinical practice, individuals are generally diagnosed by an interview with a psychiatrist based on a mental status examination, which may take into account observations by relatives and others. One tool of diagnosing personality disorders is a process involving interviews with scoring systems. The patient is asked to answer questions, and depending on their answers, the trained interviewer tries to code what their responses were. This process is fairly time-consuming.

DSM-IV-TR Personality disorders from the perspective of the five-factor model of general personality functioning[47]: 1723  (including previous DSM revisions)
Factors PPD SzPD StPD ASPD BPD HPD NPD AvPD DPD OCPD PAPD DpPD SDPD SaPD
Neuroticism (vs. emotional stability)
Anxiousness (vs. unconcerned) High Low High High High High
Angry hostility (vs. dispassionate) High High High High High
Depressiveness (vs. optimistic) High High
Self-consciousness (vs. shameless) High Low Low Low High High High
Impulsivity (vs. restrained) High High High Low Low
Vulnerability (vs. fearless) Low High High High
Extraversion (vs. introversion)
Warmth (vs. coldness) Low Low Low Low High Low Low High
Gregariousness (vs. withdrawal) Low Low Low High Low Low High
Assertiveness (vs. submissiveness) High High Low Low Low
Activity (vs. passivity) Low High High Low High
Excitement seeking (vs. lifeless) Low High High High Low Low Low High
Positive emotionality (vs. anhedonia) Low Low High Low High
Open-mindedness (vs. closed-minded)
Fantasy (vs. concrete) High High Low High
Aesthetics (vs. disinterest)
Feelings (vs. alexithymia) Low High High Low Low High
Actions (vs. predictable) Low Low High High High High Low Low Low Low
Ideas (vs. closed-minded) Low High Low Low Low Low
Values (vs. dogmatic) Low High Low High
Agreeableness (vs. antagonism)
Trust (vs. mistrust) Low Low High Low High Low High Low
Straightforwardness (vs. deception) Low Low Low Low High Low
Altruism (vs. exploitative) Low Low Low High High Low
Compliance (vs. aggression) Low Low Low High Low High Low
Modesty (vs. arrogance) Low Low High High High High Low
Tender-mindedness (vs. tough-minded) Low Low Low High Low
Conscientiousness (vs. disinhibition)
Competence (vs. laxness) High Low Low High
Order (vs. disorderly) Low High High Low
Dutifulness (vs. irresponsibility) Low High Low High High
Achievement striving (vs. lackadaisical) Low High High Low
Self-discipline (vs. negligence) Low Low High Low High Low
Deliberation (vs. rashness) Low Low Low High High High Low

Abbreviations used: PPD – Paranoid Personality Disorder, SzPD – Schizoid Personality Disorder, StPD – Schizotypal Personality Disorder, ASPD – Antisocial Personality Disorder, BPD – Borderline Personality Disorder, HPD – Histrionic Personality Disorder, NPD – Narcissistic Personality Disorder, AvPD – Avoidant Personality Disorder, DPD – Dependent Personality Disorder, OCPD – Obsessive–Compulsive Personality Disorder, PAPD – Passive–Aggressive Personality Disorder, DpPD – Depressive Personality Disorder, SDPD – Self-Defeating Personality Disorder, SaPD – Sadistic Personality Disorder, and n/a – not available.

As of 2002, there were over fifty published studies relating the five factor model (FFM) to personality disorders.[60] Since that time, quite a number of additional studies have expanded on this research base and provided further empirical support for understanding the DSM personality disorders in terms of the FFM domains.[61] In her seminal review of the personality disorder literature published in 2007, Lee Anna Clark asserted that "the five-factor model of personality is widely accepted as representing the higher-order structure of both normal and abnormal personality traits".[62]

The five factor model has been shown to significantly predict all 10 personality disorder symptoms and outperform the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) in the prediction of borderline, avoidant, and dependent personality disorder symptoms.[63]

Research results examining the relationships between the FFM and each of the ten DSM personality disorder diagnostic categories are widely available. For example, in a study published in 2003 titled "The five-factor model and personality disorder empirical literature: A meta-analytic review",[64] the authors analyzed data from 15 other studies to determine how personality disorders are different and similar, respectively, with regard to underlying personality traits. In terms of how personality disorders differ, the results showed that each disorder displays a FFM profile that is meaningful and predictable given its unique diagnostic criteria. With regard to their similarities, the findings revealed that the most prominent and consistent personality dimensions underlying a large number of the personality disorders are positive associations with neuroticism and negative associations with agreeableness.

Openness to experience edit

At least three aspects of openness to experience are relevant to understanding personality disorders: cognitive distortions, lack of insight (means the ability to recognize one's own mental illness here) and impulsivity. Problems related to high openness that can cause problems with social or professional functioning are excessive fantasising, peculiar thinking, diffuse identity, unstable goals and nonconformity with the demands of the society.[65]

High openness is characteristic to schizotypal personality disorder (odd and fragmented thinking), narcissistic personality disorder (excessive self-valuation) and paranoid personality disorder (sensitivity to external hostility). Lack of insight (shows low openness) is characteristic to all personality disorders and could help explain the persistence of maladaptive behavioral patterns.[66]

The problems associated with low openness are difficulties adapting to change, low tolerance for different worldviews or lifestyles, emotional flattening, alexithymia and a narrow range of interests.[65] Rigidity is the most obvious aspect of (low) openness among personality disorders and that shows lack of knowledge of one's emotional experiences. It is most characteristic of obsessive–compulsive personality disorder; the opposite of it known as impulsivity (here: an aspect of openness that shows a tendency to behave unusually or autistically) is characteristic of schizotypal and borderline personality disorders.[66]

Causes edit

Currently, there are no definitive proven causes for personality disorders. However, there are numerous possible causes and known risk factors supported by scientific research that vary depending on the disorder, the individual, and the circumstance. Overall, findings show that genetic disposition and life experiences, such as trauma and abuse, play a key role in the development of personality disorders.

Child abuse edit

Child abuse and neglect consistently show up as risk factors to the development of personality disorders in adulthood.[67] A study looked at retrospective reports of abuse of participants that had demonstrated psychopathology throughout their life and were later found to have past experience with abuse. In a study of 793 mothers and children, researchers asked mothers if they had screamed at their children, and told them that they did not love them or threatened to send them away. Children who had experienced such verbal abuse were three times as likely as other children (who did not experience such verbal abuse) to have borderline, narcissistic, obsessive–compulsive or paranoid personality disorders in adulthood.[68] The sexually abused group demonstrated the most consistently elevated patterns of psychopathology. Officially verified physical abuse showed an extremely strong correlation with the development of antisocial and impulsive behavior. On the other hand, cases of abuse of the neglectful type that created childhood pathology were found to be subject to partial remission in adulthood.[67]

Socioeconomic status edit

Socioeconomic status has also been looked at as a potential cause for personality disorders. There is a strong association with low parental/neighborhood socioeconomic status and personality disorder symptoms.[69] In a 2015 publication from Bonn, Germany, which compared parental socioeconomic status and a child's personality, it was seen that children who were from higher socioeconomic backgrounds were more altruistic, less risk seeking, and had overall higher IQs.[70] These traits correlate with a low risk of developing personality disorders later on in life. In a study looking at female children who were detained for disciplinary actions found that psychological problems were most negatively associated with socioeconomic problems.[71] Furthermore, social disorganization was found to be inversely correlated with personality disorder symptoms.[72]

Parenting edit

Evidence shows personality disorders may begin with parental personality issues. These cause the child to have their own difficulties in adulthood, such as difficulties reaching higher education, obtaining jobs, and securing dependable relationships. By either genetic or modeling mechanisms, children can pick up these traits.[69] Additionally, poor parenting appears to have symptom elevating effects on personality disorders.[69] More specifically, lack of maternal bonding has also been correlated with personality disorders. In a study comparing 100 healthy individuals to 100 borderline personality disorder patients, analysis showed that BPD patients were significantly more likely not to have been breastfed as a baby (42.4% in BPD vs. 9.2% in healthy controls).[73] These researchers suggested "Breastfeeding may act as an early indicator of the mother-infant relationship that seems to be relevant for bonding and attachment later in life". Additionally, findings suggest personality disorders show a negative correlation with two attachment variables: maternal availability and dependability. When left unfostered, other attachment and interpersonal problems occur later in life ultimately leading to development of personality disorders.[74]

Genetics edit

Currently, genetic research for the understanding of the development of personality disorders is severely lacking. However, there are a few possible risk factors currently in discovery. Researchers are currently looking into genetic mechanisms for traits such as aggression, fear and anxiety, which are associated with diagnosed individuals. More research is being conducted into disorder specific mechanisms.[75]

Neurobiological correlates – hippocampus, amygdala edit

Research shows that several brain regions are altered in personality disorders, particularly: hippocampus up to 18% smaller, a smaller amygdala, malfunctions in the striatum-nucleus accumbens and the cingulum neural pathways connecting them and taking care of the feedback loops on what to do with all the incoming information from the multiple senses; so what comes out is anti-social – not according to what is the social norm, socially acceptable and appropriate.[76][77]

Management edit

Specific approaches edit

There are many different forms (modalities) of treatment used for personality disorders:[78]

  • Individual psychotherapy has been a mainstay of treatment. There are long-term and short-term (brief) forms.
  • Family therapy, including couples therapy.
  • Group therapy for personality dysfunction is probably the second most used.
  • Psychological-education may be used as an addition.
  • Self-help groups may provide resources for personality disorders.
  • Psychiatric medications for treating symptoms of personality dysfunction or co-occurring conditions.
  • Milieu therapy, a kind of group-based residential approach, has a history of use in treating personality disorders, including therapeutic communities.
  • The practice of mindfulness that includes developing the ability to be nonjudgmentally aware of unpleasant emotions appears to be a promising clinical tool for managing different types of personality disorders.[79][80]

There are different specific theories or schools of therapy within many of these modalities. They may, for example, emphasize psychodynamic techniques, or cognitive or behavioral techniques. In clinical practice, many therapists use an 'eclectic' approach, taking elements of different schools as and when they seem to fit to an individual client. There is also often a focus on common themes that seem to be beneficial regardless of techniques, including attributes of the therapist (e.g. trustworthiness, competence, caring), processes afforded to the client (e.g. ability to express and confide difficulties and emotions), and the match between the two (e.g. aiming for mutual respect, trust and boundaries).

Response of patients with personality disorders to biological and psychosocial treatments[47]: 36 
Cluster Evidence for brain dysfunction Response to biological treatments Response to psychosocial treatments
A Evidence for relationship of schizotypal personality to schizophrenia; otherwise none known. Schizotypal patients may improve on antipsychotic medication; otherwise not indicated. Poor. Supportive psychotherapy may help.
B Evidence suggestive for antisocial and borderline personalities; otherwise none known. Antidepressants, antipsychotics, or mood stabilizers may help for borderline personality; otherwise not indicated. Poor in antisocial personality. Variable in borderline, narcissistic, and histrionic personalities.
C None known. No direct response. Medications may help with comorbid anxiety and depression. Most common treatment for these disorders. Response variable.

Despite the lack of evidence supporting the benefit of antipsychotics in people with personality disorders, 1 in 4 who do not have a serious mental illness are prescribed them in UK primary care. Many people receive these medication for over a year, contrary to NICE guidelines.[81][82]

Challenges edit

The management and treatment of personality disorders can be a challenging and controversial area, for by definition the difficulties have been enduring and affect multiple areas of functioning. This often involves interpersonal issues, and there can be difficulties in seeking and obtaining help from organizations in the first place, as well as with establishing and maintaining a specific therapeutic relationship. On the one hand, an individual may not consider themselves to have a mental health problem, while on the other, community mental health services may view individuals with personality disorders as too complex or difficult, and may directly or indirectly exclude individuals with such diagnoses or associated behaviors.[83] The disruptiveness that people with personality disorders can create in an organisation makes these, arguably, the most challenging conditions to manage.

Apart from all these issues, an individual may not consider their personality to be disordered or the cause of problems. This perspective may be caused by the patient's ignorance or lack of insight into their own condition, an ego-syntonic perception of the problems with their personality that prevents them from experiencing it as being in conflict with their goals and self-image, or by the simple fact that there is no distinct or objective boundary between 'normal' and 'abnormal' personalities. There is substantial social stigma and discrimination related to the diagnosis.

The term 'personality disorder' encompasses a wide range of issues, each with a different level of severity or impairment; thus, personality disorders can require fundamentally different approaches and understandings. To illustrate the scope of the matter, consider that while some disorders or individuals are characterized by continual social withdrawal and the shunning of relationships, others may cause fluctuations in forwardness. The extremes are worse still: at one extreme lie self-harm and self-neglect, while at another extreme some individuals may commit violence and crime. There can be other factors such as problematic substance use or dependency or behavioral addictions.

Therapists in this area can become disheartened by lack of initial progress, or by apparent progress that then leads to setbacks. Clients may be perceived as negative, rejecting, demanding, aggressive or manipulative. This has been looked at in terms of both therapist and client; in terms of social skills, coping efforts, defense mechanisms, or deliberate strategies; and in terms of moral judgments or the need to consider underlying motivations for specific behaviors or conflicts. The vulnerabilities of a client, and indeed a therapist, may become lost behind actual or apparent strength and resilience. It is commonly stated that there is always a need to maintain appropriate professional personal boundaries, while allowing for emotional expression and therapeutic relationships. However, there can be difficulty acknowledging the different worlds and views that both the client and therapist may live with. A therapist may assume that the kinds of relationships and ways of interacting that make them feel safe and comfortable have the same effect on clients. As an example of one extreme, people who may have been exposed to hostility, deceptiveness, rejection, aggression or abuse in their lives, may in some cases be made confused, intimidated or suspicious by presentations of warmth, intimacy or positivity. On the other hand, reassurance, openness and clear communication are usually helpful and needed. It can take several months of sessions, and perhaps several stops and starts, to begin to develop a trusting relationship that can meaningfully address a client's issues.[84]

Epidemiology edit

The prevalence of personality disorder in the general community was largely unknown until surveys starting from the 1990s. In 2008 the median rate of diagnosable PD was estimated at 10.6%, based on six major studies across three nations. This rate of around one in ten, especially as associated with high use of cocaine, is described as a major public health concern requiring attention by researchers and clinicians.[85]

The prevalence of individual personality disorders ranges from about 2% to 8% for the more common varieties, such as obsessive-compulsive, schizotypal, antisocial, borderline, and histrionic, to 0.5–1% for the least common, such as narcissistic and avoidant.[86][47]

A screening survey across 13 countries by the World Health Organization using DSM-IV criteria, reported in 2009 a prevalence estimate of around 6% for personality disorders. The rate sometimes varied with demographic and socioeconomic factors, and functional impairment was partly explained by co-occurring mental disorders.[87] In the US, screening data from the National Comorbidity Survey Replication between 2001 and 2003, combined with interviews of a subset of respondents, indicated a population prevalence of around 9% for personality disorders in total. Functional disability associated with the diagnoses appeared to be largely due to co-occurring mental disorders (Axis I in the DSM).[88] This statistic has been supported by other studies in the US, with overall global prevalence statistics ranging from 9% to 11%.[89][90]

A UK national epidemiological study (based on DSM-IV screening criteria), reclassified into levels of severity rather than just diagnosis, reported in 2010 that the majority of people show some personality difficulties in one way or another (short of threshold for diagnosis), while the prevalence of the most complex and severe cases (including meeting criteria for multiple diagnoses in different clusters) was estimated at 1.3%. Even low levels of personality symptoms were associated with functional problems, but the most severely in need of services was a much smaller group.[91]

Personality disorders (especially Cluster A) are found more commonly among homeless people.[92]

There are some sex differences in the frequency of personality disorders which are shown in the table below.[93]: 206  The known prevalence of some personality disorders, especially borderline PD and antisocial PD are affected by diagnostic bias. This is due to many factors including disproportionately high research towards borderline PD and antisocial PD, alongside social and gender stereotypes, and the relationship between diagnosis rates and prevalence rates.[86] Since the removal of depressive PD, self-defeating PD, sadistic PD and passive-aggressive PD from the DSM-5, studies analysing their prevalence and demographics have been limited.

Sex differences in the frequency of personality disorders
Type of personality disorder Predominant sex Notes
Paranoid personality disorder Inconclusive In clinical samples men have higher rates, whereas epidemiologically there is a reported higher rate of women[94] although due the controversy of paranoid personality disorder the usefulness of these results is disputed[86][95]
Schizoid personality disorder Male About 10% more common in males[96]
Schizotypal personality disorder Inconclusive The DSM-5 reports it is slightly more common in males, although other results suggest a prevalence of 4.2% in women and 3.7% in men[1][97]
Antisocial personality disorder Male About three times more common in men,[98] with rates substantially higher in prison populations, up to almost 50% in some prison populations[98]
Borderline personality disorder Female Diagnosis rates vary from about three times more common in women, to only a minor predominance of women over men. This is partially attributable to increased rates of treatment-seeking in women, although disputed[86][94]
Histrionic personality disorder Equal Prevalence rates are equal, although diagnostic rates can favour women[99][94][86]
Narcissistic personality disorder Male 7.7% for men, 4.8% for women[100][101]
Avoidant personality disorder Equal[86]
Dependent personality disorder Female 0.6% in women, 0.4% in men[94][86]
Depressive personality disorder N/A No longer present in the DSM-5 and no longer widely used[1]
Passive–aggressive personality disorder N/A No longer present in the DSM-5 and no longer widely used[1][102]
Obsessive–compulsive personality disorder Inconclusive The DSM-5 lists a male-to-female ratio of 2:1, however other studies have found equal rates[103]
Self-defeating personality disorder Female[104] Removed entirely since the DSM-IV, not present in the DSM-5 and no longer widely used[1]
Sadistic personality disorder Male[105] Removed entirely since the DSM-IV, not present in the DSM-5 and no longer widely used[1]

History edit

Diagnostic and Statistical Manual history edit

Personality disorder diagnoses in each edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual[18][93]: 17 
DSM-I DSM-II DSM-III DSM-III-R DSM-IV(-TR) DSM-5
Inadequate[a] Inadequate Deleted[93]: 19 
Schizoid[a] Schizoid Schizoid Schizoid Schizoid Schizoid
Cyclothymic[a] Cyclothymic Reclassified[93]: 16, 19 
Paranoid[a] Paranoid Paranoid Paranoid Paranoid Paranoid
Schizotypal Schizotypal Schizotypal Schizotypal[b]
Emotionally unstable[c] Hysterical[93]: 18  Histrionic Histrionic Histrionic Histrionic
Borderline[93]: 19  Borderline Borderline Borderline
Compulsive[c] Obsessive–compulsive Compulsive Obsessive–compulsive Obsessive–compulsive Obsessive–compulsive
Passive–aggressive,
Passive–dependent subtype[c]
Deleted[93]: 18  Dependent[93]: 19  Dependent Dependent Dependent
Passive–aggressive,
Passive–aggressive subtype[c]
Passive–aggressive Passive–aggressive Passive–aggressive Deleted[d][106]: 629 
Passive–aggressive,
Aggressive subtype[c]
Explosive[93]: 18  Deleted[93]: 19 
Asthenic[93]: 18  Deleted[93]: 19 
Avoidant[93]: 19  Avoidant Avoidant Avoidant
Narcissistic[93]: 19  Narcissistic Narcissistic Narcissistic
Antisocial reaction[e] Antisocial Antisocial Antisocial Antisocial Antisocial
Dyssocial reaction[e]
Sexual deviation[e] Reclassified[93]: 16, 18 
Addiction[e] Reclassified[93]: 16, 18 
Appendix
Self-defeating Passive-aggressive (Negativistic)[106]: 733  Personality disorder - Trait specified
Sadistic Depressive

  Introduced   Deleted

  1. ^ a b c d DSM-I Personality Pattern disturbance subsection.[93]: 16 
  2. ^ Also classified as a schizophrenia-spectrum disorder in addition to personality disorder.
  3. ^ a b c d e DSM-I Personality Trait disturbance subsection.[93]: 16 
  4. ^ Excluded from formal diagnoses and moved to Appendix.
  5. ^ a b c d DSM-I Sociopathic personality disturbance subsection.[93]: 16 

Before the 20th century edit

Personality disorder is a term with a distinctly modern meaning, owing in part to its clinical usage and the institutional character of modern psychiatry. The currently accepted meaning must be understood in the context of historical changing classification systems such as DSM-IV and its predecessors. Although highly anachronistic, and ignoring radical differences in the character of subjectivity and social relations, some have suggested similarities to other concepts going back to at least the ancient Greeks.[3]: 35  For example, the Greek philosopher Theophrastus described 29 'character' types that he saw as deviations from the norm, and similar views have been found in Asian, Arabic and Celtic cultures. A long-standing influence in the Western world was Galen's concept of personality types, which he linked to the four humours proposed by Hippocrates.

Such views lasted into the eighteenth century, when experiments began to question the supposed biologically based humours and 'temperaments'. Psychological concepts of character and 'self' became widespread. In the nineteenth century, 'personality' referred to a person's conscious awareness of their behavior, a disorder of which could be linked to altered states such as dissociation. This sense of the term has been compared to the use of the term 'multiple personality disorder' in the first versions of the DSM.[107]

Physicians in the early nineteenth century started to diagnose forms of insanity involving disturbed emotions and behaviors but seemingly without significant intellectual impairment or delusions or hallucinations. Philippe Pinel referred to this as ' manie sans délire ' – mania without delusions – and described a number of cases mainly involving excessive or inexplicable anger or rage. James Cowles Prichard advanced a similar concept he called moral insanity, which would be used to diagnose patients for some decades. 'Moral' in this sense referred to affect (emotion or mood) rather than ethics, but it was arguably based in part on religious, social and moral beliefs, with a pessimism about medical intervention so social control should take precedence.[108] These categories were much different and broader than later definitions of personality disorder, while also being developed by some into a more specific meaning of moral degeneracy akin to later ideas about 'psychopaths'. Separately, Richard von Krafft-Ebing popularized the terms sadism and masochism, as well as homosexuality, as psychiatric issues.

The German psychiatrist Koch sought to make the moral insanity concept more scientific, and in 1891 suggested the phrase 'psychopathic inferiority', theorized to be a congenital disorder. This referred to continual and rigid patterns of misconduct or dysfunction in the absence of apparent "mental retardation" or illness, supposedly without a moral judgment. Described as deeply rooted in his Christian faith, his work established the concept of personality disorder as used today.[109]

20th century edit

In the early 20th century, another German psychiatrist, Emil Kraepelin, included a chapter on psychopathic inferiority in his influential work on clinical psychiatry for students and physicians. He suggested six types – excitable, unstable, eccentric, liar, swindler and quarrelsome. The categories were essentially defined by the most disordered criminal offenders observed, distinguished between criminals by impulse, professional criminals, and morbid vagabonds who wandered through life. Kraepelin also described three paranoid (meaning then delusional) disorders, resembling later concepts of schizophrenia, delusional disorder and paranoid personality disorder. A diagnostic term for the latter concept would be included in the DSM from 1952, and from 1980 the DSM would also include schizoid, schizotypal; interpretations of earlier (1921) theories of Ernst Kretschmer led to a distinction between these and another type later included in the DSM, avoidant personality disorder.

In 1933 Russian psychiatrist Pyotr Borisovich Gannushkin published his book Manifestations of Psychopathies: Statics, Dynamics, Systematic Aspects, which was one of the first attempts to develop a detailed typology of psychopathies. Regarding maladaptation, ubiquity, and stability as the three main symptoms of behavioral pathology, he distinguished nine clusters of psychopaths: cycloids (including constitutionally depressive, constitutionally excitable, cyclothymics, and emotionally labile), asthenics (including psychasthenics), schizoids (including dreamers), paranoiacs (including fanatics), epileptoids, hysterical personalities (including pathological liars), unstable psychopaths, antisocial psychopaths, and constitutionally stupid.[110] Some elements of Gannushkin's typology were later incorporated into the theory developed by a Russian adolescent psychiatrist, Andrey Yevgenyevich Lichko, who was also interested in psychopathies along with their milder forms, the so-called accentuations of character.[111]

In 1939, psychiatrist David Henderson published a theory of 'psychopathic states' that contributed to popularly linking the term to anti-social behavior. Hervey M. Cleckley's 1941 text, The Mask of Sanity, based on his personal categorization of similarities he noted in some prisoners, marked the start of the modern clinical conception of psychopathy and its popularist usage.[112]

Towards the mid 20th century, psychoanalytic theories were coming to the fore based on work from the turn of the century being popularized by Sigmund Freud and others. This included the concept of character disorders, which were seen as enduring problems linked not to specific symptoms but to pervasive internal conflicts or derailments of normal childhood development. These were often understood as weaknesses of character or willful deviance, and were distinguished from neurosis or psychosis. The term 'borderline' stems from a belief some individuals were functioning on the edge of those two categories, and a number of the other personality disorder categories were also heavily influenced by this approach, including dependent, obsessive–compulsive and histrionic,[113] the latter starting off as a conversion symptom of hysteria particularly associated with women, then a hysterical personality, then renamed histrionic personality disorder in later versions of the DSM. A passive aggressive style was defined clinically by Colonel William Menninger during World War II in the context of men's reactions to military compliance, which would later be referenced as a personality disorder in the DSM.[114] Otto Kernberg was influential with regard to the concepts of borderline and narcissistic personalities later incorporated in 1980 as disorders into the DSM.

Meanwhile, a more general personality psychology had been developing in academia and to some extent clinically. Gordon Allport published theories of personality traits from the 1920s—and Henry Murray advanced a theory called personology, which influenced a later key advocate of personality disorders, Theodore Millon. Tests were developing or being applied for personality evaluation, including projective tests such as the Rorschach test, as well as questionnaires such as the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory. Around mid-century, Hans Eysenck was analysing traits and personality types, and psychiatrist Kurt Schneider was popularising a clinical use in place of the previously more usual terms 'character', 'temperament' or 'constitution'.

American psychiatrists officially recognized concepts of enduring personality disturbances in the first Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders in the 1950s, which relied heavily on psychoanalytic concepts. Somewhat more neutral language was employed in the DSM-II in 1968, though the terms and descriptions had only a slight resemblance to current definitions. The DSM-III published in 1980 made some major changes, notably putting all personality disorders onto a second separate 'axis' along with "mental retardation", intended to signify more enduring patterns, distinct from what were considered axis one mental disorders. 'Inadequate' and 'asthenic' personality disorder' categories were deleted, and others were expanded into more types, or changed from being personality disorders to regular disorders. Sociopathic personality disorder, which had been the term for psychopathy, was renamed Antisocial Personality Disorder. Most categories were given more specific 'operationalized' definitions, with standard criteria psychiatrists could agree on to conduct research and diagnose patients.[115] In the DSM-III revision, self-defeating personality disorder and sadistic personality disorder were included as provisional diagnoses requiring further study. They were dropped in the DSM-IV, though a proposed 'depressive personality disorder' was added; in addition, the official diagnosis of passive–aggressive personality disorder was dropped, tentatively renamed 'negativistic personality disorder.'[116]

International differences have been noted in how attitudes have developed towards the diagnosis of personality disorder. Kurt Schneider argued they were 'abnormal varieties of psychic life' and therefore not necessarily the domain of psychiatry, a view said to still have influence in Germany today. British psychiatrists have also been reluctant to address such disorders or consider them on par with other mental disorders, which has been attributed partly to resource pressures within the National Health Service, as well as to negative medical attitudes towards behaviors associated with personality disorders. In the US, the prevailing healthcare system and psychoanalytic tradition has been said to provide a rationale for private therapists to diagnose some personality disorders more broadly and provide ongoing treatment for them.[117]

See also edit

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Further reading edit

  • Marshall WL, Serin R (1997). "Personality Disorders.". In Turner SM, Hersen R (eds.). Adult Psychopathology and Diagnosis. New York: Wiley. pp. 508–541.
  • Murphy N, McVey D (2010). . London: Routledge. Archived from the original on 15 July 2011.
  • Millon T, Davis RD (1996). Disorders of personality : DSM-IV and beyond (2nd ed.). New York: Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-01186-6.
  • Yudofsky SC (2005). Fatal Flaws: Navigating Destructive Relationships With People With Disorders of Personality and Character (1st ed.). Washington, DC. ISBN 978-1-58562-214-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

External links edit

  • Personality Disorders Foundation
  • National Mental Health Association personality disorder fact sheet 16 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  • Personality Disorders information leaflet from The Royal College of Psychiatrists

personality, disorder, class, mental, disorders, characterized, enduring, maladaptive, patterns, behavior, cognition, inner, experience, exhibited, across, many, contexts, deviating, from, those, accepted, individual, culture, these, patterns, develop, early, . Personality disorders PD are a class of mental disorders characterized by enduring maladaptive patterns of behavior cognition and inner experience exhibited across many contexts and deviating from those accepted by the individual s culture 1 These patterns develop early are inflexible and are associated with significant distress or disability The definitions vary by source and remain a matter of controversy 2 3 4 Official criteria for diagnosing personality disorders are listed in the sixth chapter of the International Classification of Diseases ICD and in the American Psychiatric Association s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders DSM Personality disordersSpecialtyPsychiatry clinical psychologyPersonality defined psychologically is the set of enduring behavioral and mental traits that distinguish individual humans Hence personality disorders are defined by experiences and behaviors that deviate from social norms and expectations Those diagnosed with a personality disorder may experience difficulties in cognition emotiveness interpersonal functioning or impulse control For psychiatric patients the prevalence of personality disorders is estimated between 40 and 60 5 6 7 The behavior patterns of personality disorders are typically recognized by adolescence the beginning of adulthood or sometimes even childhood and often have a pervasive negative impact on the quality of life 1 8 9 Treatment for personality disorders is primarily psychotherapeutic Evidence based psychotherapies for personality disorders include cognitive behavioral therapy and dialectical behavior therapy especially for borderline personality disorder 10 11 A variety of psychoanalytic approaches are also used 12 Personality disorders are associated with considerable stigma in popular and clinical discourse alike 13 Despite various methodological schemas designed to categorize personality disorders many issues occur with classifying a personality disorder because the theory and diagnosis of such disorders occur within prevailing cultural expectations thus their validity is contested by some experts on the basis of inevitable subjectivity They argue that the theory and diagnosis of personality disorders are based strictly on social or even sociopolitical and economic considerations 14 Contents 1 Classification and symptoms 1 1 DSM 5 1 1 1 Cluster A odd or eccentric disorders 1 1 2 Cluster B emotional or erratic disorders 1 1 3 Cluster C anxious or fearful disorders 1 2 DSM 5 general criteria 1 3 ICD 11 1 4 ICD 10 1 5 Other personality types and Millon s description 1 6 Additional factors 1 6 1 Severity 1 6 2 Effect on social functioning 1 6 3 Attribution 2 Presentation 2 1 Comorbidity 2 2 Impact on functioning 3 Issues 3 1 In the workplace 3 2 In children 3 3 Versus normal personality 3 3 1 Openness to experience 4 Causes 4 1 Child abuse 4 2 Socioeconomic status 4 3 Parenting 4 4 Genetics 4 5 Neurobiological correlates hippocampus amygdala 5 Management 5 1 Specific approaches 5 2 Challenges 6 Epidemiology 7 History 7 1 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual history 7 2 Before the 20th century 7 3 20th century 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksClassification and symptoms editThe two latest editions of the major systems of classification are the International Classification of Diseases 11th revision ICD 11 published by the World Health Organization the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fifth Edition DSM 5 by the American Psychiatric Association The ICD is a collection of alpha numerical codes which have been assigned to all known clinical states and provides uniform terminology for medical records billing statistics and research The DSM defines psychiatric diagnoses based on research and expert consensus Both have deliberately aligned their diagnoses to some extent but some differences remain For example the ICD 10 included narcissistic personality disorder in the group of other specific personality disorders while DSM 5 does not include enduring personality change after catastrophic experience The ICD 10 classified the DSM 5 schizotypal personality disorder as a form of schizophrenia rather than as a personality disorder There are accepted diagnostic issues and controversies with regard to distinguishing particular personality disorder categories from each other 15 Dissociative identity disorder previously known as multiple personality as well as multiple personality disorder has always been classified as a dissociative disorder and never was regarded as a personality disorder 16 DSM 5 edit The most recent fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders stresses that a personality disorder is an enduring and inflexible pattern of long duration leading to significant distress or impairment and is not due to use of substances or another medical condition The DSM 5 lists personality disorders in the same way as other mental disorders rather than on a separate axis as previously 17 DSM 5 lists ten specific personality disorders paranoid schizoid schizotypal antisocial borderline histrionic narcissistic avoidant dependent and obsessive compulsive personality disorder The DSM 5 also contains three diagnoses for personality patterns not matching these ten disorders which nevertheless exhibit characteristics of a personality disorder 18 Personality change due to another medical condition personality disturbance due to the direct effects of a medical condition Other specified personality disorder disorder which meets the general criteria for a personality disorder but fails to meet the criteria for a specific disorder with the reason given Unspecified personality disorder disorder which meets the general criteria for a personality disorder but is not included in the DSM 5 classificationThese specific personality disorders are grouped into the following three clusters based on descriptive similarities Cluster A odd or eccentric disorders edit Cluster A personality disorders are often associated with schizophrenia in particular schizotypal personality disorder shares some of its hallmark symptoms with schizophrenia e g acute discomfort in close relationships cognitive or perceptual distortions and eccentricities of behavior However people diagnosed with odd eccentric personality disorders tend to have a greater grasp on reality than those with schizophrenia People with these disorders can be paranoid and have difficulty being understood by others as they often have odd or eccentric modes of speaking and an unwillingness and inability to form and maintain close relationships Though their perceptions may be unusual these anomalies are distinguished from delusions or hallucinations as people with these would be diagnosed with other conditions Significant evidence suggests a small proportion of people with Cluster A personality disorders especially schizotypal personality disorder have the potential to develop schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders These disorders also have a higher probability of occurring among individuals whose first degree relatives have either schizophrenia or a Cluster A personality disorder 19 Paranoid personality disorder pattern of irrational suspicion and mistrust of others interpreting motivations as malevolent Schizoid personality disorder cold affect and detachment from social relationships apathy and restricted emotional expression Schizotypal personality disorder pattern of extreme discomfort interacting socially and distorted cognition and perceptionsCluster B emotional or erratic disorders edit Cluster B personality disorders are characterized by dramatic impulsive self destructive emotional behavior and sometimes incomprehensible interactions with others 20 Antisocial personality disorder pervasive pattern of disregard for and violation of the rights of others lack of empathy and lack of remorse callousness bloated self image and manipulative and impulsive behavior Borderline personality disorder pervasive pattern of abrupt emotional outbursts fear of abandonment unhealthy attachment altered empathy 21 and instability in relationships self image identity behavior and affect often leading to self harm and impulsivity Histrionic personality disorder pervasive pattern of attention seeking behavior including excessive emotions an impressionistic style of speech inappropriate seduction exhibitionism and egocentrism Narcissistic personality disorder pervasive pattern of superior grandiosity haughtiness need for admiration deceiving others and lack of empathy and in more severe expressions criminal behavior with remorse 22 Cluster C anxious or fearful disorders edit Avoidant personality disorder pervasive feelings of social inhibition and inadequacy and extreme sensitivity to negative evaluation Dependent personality disorder pervasive psychological need to be cared for by other people Obsessive compulsive personality disorder rigid conformity to rules perfectionism and control to the point of exclusion of leisurely activities and friendships distinct from obsessive compulsive disorder DSM 5 general criteria edit Both the DSM 5 and the ICD 11 diagnostic systems provide a definition and six criteria for a general personality disorder These criteria should be met by all personality disorder cases before a more specific diagnosis can be made The DSM 5 indicates that any personality disorder diagnosis must meet the following criteria 18 There is an enduring pattern of inner experience and behavior that deviates markedly from the expectations of the individual s culture This pattern is manifested in two or more of the following areas Cognition i e ways of perceiving and interpreting self other people and events Affectivity i e the range intensity lability and appropriateness of emotional response Interpersonal functioning Impulse control The enduring pattern is inflexible and pervasive across a broad range of personal and social situations The enduring pattern leads to clinically significant distress or impairment in functioning in social occupational or other important areas The pattern is stable and of long duration and its onset can be traced back at least to adolescence or early adulthood The enduring pattern is not better explained as a manifestation or consequence of another mental disorder The enduring pattern is not attributable to the physiological effects of a substance e g a drug of abuse a medication or another medical condition e g head trauma ICD 11 edit See also ICD 11 Personality disorder The ICD 11 personality disorder section differs substantially from the previous edition ICD 10 All distinct PDs have been merged into one personality disorder 6D10 which can be coded as mild 6D10 0 moderate 6D10 1 severe 6D10 2 or severity unspecified 6D10 Z There is also an additional category called personality difficulty QE50 7 which can be used to describe personality traits that are problematic but do not meet the diagnostic criteria for a PD A personality disorder or difficulty can be specified by one or more prominent personality traits or patterns 6D11 The ICD 11 uses five trait domains Negative affectivity 6D11 0 including anxiety separation insecurity distrustfulness worthlessness and emotional instability Detachment 6D11 1 including social detachment and emotional coldness Dissociality 6D11 2 including grandiosity egocentricity deception exploitativeness and aggression Disinhibition 6D11 3 including risk taking impulsivity irresponsibility and distractibility Anankastia 6D11 4 including rigid control over behaviour and affect and rigid perfectionismListed directly underneath is borderline pattern 6D11 5 a category similar to borderline personality disorder This is not a trait in itself but a combination of the five traits in certain severity In the ICD 11 any personality disorder must meet all of the following criteria 23 There is an enduring disturbance characterized by problems in functioning of aspects of the self e g identity self worth accuracy of self view self direction and or interpersonal dysfunction e g ability to develop and maintain close and mutually satisfying relationships ability to understand others perspectives and to manage conflict in relationships The disturbance has persisted over an extended period of time e g lasting 2 years or more The disturbance is manifest in patterns of cognition emotional experience emotional expression and behaviour that are maladaptive e g inflexible or poorly regulated The disturbance is manifest across a range of personal and social situations i e is not limited to specific relationships or social roles though it may be consistently evoked by particular types of circumstances and not others The symptoms are not due to the direct effects of a medication or substance including withdrawal effects and are not better accounted for by another mental disorder a disease of the nervous system or another medical condition The disturbance is associated with substantial distress or significant impairment in personal family social educational occupational or other important areas of functioning Personality disorder should not be diagnosed if the patterns of behaviour characterizing the personality disturbance are developmentally appropriate e g problems related to establishing an independent self identity during adolescence or can be explained primarily by social or cultural factors including socio political conflict ICD 10 edit The ICD 10 lists these general guideline criteria 24 Markedly disharmonious attitudes and behavior generally involving several areas of functioning e g affectivity arousal impulse control ways of perceiving and thinking and style of relating to others The abnormal behavior pattern is enduring of long standing and not limited to episodes of mental illness The abnormal behavior pattern is pervasive and clearly maladaptive to a broad range of personal and social situations The above manifestations always appear during childhood or adolescence and continue into adulthood The disorder leads to considerable personal distress but this may only become apparent late in its course The disorder is usually but not invariably associated with significant problems in occupational and social performance The ICD adds For different cultures it may be necessary to develop specific sets of criteria with regard to social norms rules and obligations 24 Chapter V in the ICD 10 contains the mental and behavioral disorders and includes categories of personality disorder and enduring personality changes They are defined as ingrained patterns indicated by inflexible and disabling responses that significantly differ from how the average person in the culture perceives thinks and feels particularly in relating to others 25 The specific personality disorders are paranoid schizoid schizotypal dissocial emotionally unstable borderline type and impulsive type histrionic narcissistic anankastic anxious avoidant and dependent 26 Besides the ten specific PD there are the following categories Other specific personality disorders involves PD characterized as eccentric haltlose immature narcissistic passive aggressive or psychoneurotic Personality disorder unspecified includes character neurosis and pathological personality Mixed and other personality disorders defined as conditions that are often troublesome but do not demonstrate the specific pattern of symptoms in the named disorders Enduring personality changes not attributable to brain damage and disease this is for conditions that seem to arise in adults without a diagnosis of personality disorder following catastrophic or prolonged stress or other psychiatric illness Other personality types and Millon s description edit Some types of personality disorder were in previous versions of the diagnostic manuals but have been deleted Examples include sadistic personality disorder pervasive pattern of cruel demeaning and aggressive behavior and self defeating personality disorder or masochistic personality disorder characterized by behavior consequently undermining the person s pleasure and goals They were listed in the DSM III R appendix as Proposed diagnostic categories needing further study without specific criteria 27 Psychologist Theodore Millon a researcher on personality disorders and other researchers consider some relegated diagnoses to be equally valid disorders and may also propose other personality disorders or subtypes including mixtures of aspects of different categories of the officially accepted diagnoses 28 Millon proposed the following description of personality disorders Millon s brief description of personality disorders 28 4 Type of personality disorder DSM 5 inclusion DescriptionParanoid yes Guarded defensive distrustful and suspicious Hypervigilant to the motives of others to undermine or do harm Always seeking confirmatory evidence of hidden schemes Feel righteous but persecuted Experience a pattern of pervasive distrust and suspicion of others that lasts a long time They are generally difficult to work with and are very hard to form relationships with They are also known to be argumentative and hypersensitive 29 Schizoid yes Apathetic indifferent remote solitary distant humorless contempt odd fantasies Neither desire nor need human attachments Withdrawn from relationships and prefer to be alone Little interest in others often seen as a loner Minimal awareness of the feelings of themselves or others Few drives or ambitions if any Is an uncommon condition in which people avoid social activities and consistently shy away from interaction with others It affects more males than females To others they may appear somewhat dull or humorless Because they do not tend to show emotion they may appear as though they do not care about what s going on around them 30 Schizotypal yes Eccentric self estranged bizarre absent Exhibit peculiar mannerisms and behaviors Think they can read thoughts of others Preoccupied with odd daydreams and beliefs Blur line between reality and fantasy Magical thinking and strange beliefs People with schizotypal personality disorder are often described as odd or eccentric and usually have few if any close relationships They think others think negatively of them 31 Antisocial yes Impulsive irresponsible deviant unruly Act without due consideration Meet social obligations only when self serving Disrespect societal customs rules and standards See themselves as free and independent People with antisocial personality disorder depict a long pattern of disregard for other people s rights They often cross the line and violate these rights 32 Borderline yes Frantic efforts to avoid abandonment Identity disturbance unstable sense of self image or sense of self Impulsivity spending sex substance abuse binge eating Unstable mood fluctuation between highs and lows Feelings of emptiness Ideation and devaluation of interpersonal relationships Intense or inappropriate anger Suicidal behaviour 33 Histrionic yes Hysteria dramatic seductive shallow egocentric attention seeking vain Overreact to minor events Exhibitionistic as a means of securing attention and favors See themselves as attractive and charming Constantly seeking others attention Disorder is characterized by constant attention seeking emotional overreaction and suggestibility Their tendency to over dramatize may impair relationships and lead to depression but they are often high functioning 34 Narcissistic yes Egotistical arrogant grandiose insouciant Preoccupied with fantasies of success beauty or achievement See themselves as admirable and superior and therefore entitled to special treatment Is a mental disorder in which people have an inflated sense of their own importance and a deep need for admiration Those with narcissistic personality disorder believe that they are superior to others and have little regard for other people s feelings Avoidant yes Hesitant self conscious embarrassed anxious Tense in social situations due to fear of rejection Plagued by constant performance anxiety See themselves as inept inferior or unappealing They experience long standing feelings of inadequacy and are very sensitive of what others think about them 35 Dependent yes Helpless incompetent submissive immature Withdrawn from adult responsibilities See themselves as weak or fragile Seek constant reassurance from stronger figures They have the need to be taken care of by others They fear being abandoned or separated from important people in their life 36 Obsessive compulsive yes Restrained conscientious respectful rigid Maintain a rule bound lifestyle Adhere closely to social conventions See the world in terms of regulations and hierarchies See themselves as devoted reliable efficient and productive Depressive no Somber discouraged pessimistic brooding fatalistic Present themselves as vulnerable and abandoned Feel valueless guilty and impotent Judge themselves as worthy only of criticism and contempt Hopeless suicidal restless This disorder can lead to aggressive acts and hallucinations 37 Passive aggressive Negativistic no Resentful contrary skeptical discontented Resist fulfilling others expectations Deliberately inefficient Vent anger indirectly by undermining others goals Alternately moody and irritable then sullen and withdrawn Withhold emotions Will not communicate when there is something problematic to discuss 38 Sadistic no Explosively hostile abrasive cruel dogmatic Liable to sudden outbursts of rage Gain satisfaction through dominating intimidating and humiliating others They are opinionated and closed minded Enjoy performing brutal acts on others Find pleasure in abusing others Would likely engage in a sadomasochist relationship but will not play the role of a masochist 39 Self defeating Masochistic no Deferential pleasure phobic servile blameful self effacing Encourage others to take advantage of them Deliberately defeat own achievements Seek condemning or mistreatful partners They are suspicious of people who treat them well Would likely engage in a sadomasochist relationship 40 Additional factors edit In addition to classifying by category and cluster it is possible to classify personality disorders using additional factors such as severity impact on social functioning and attribution 41 Severity edit This involves both the notion of personality difficulty as a measure of subthreshold scores for personality disorder using standard interviews and the evidence that those with the most severe personality disorders demonstrate a ripple effect of personality disturbance across the whole range of mental disorders In addition to subthreshold personality difficulty and single cluster simple personality disorder this also derives complex or diffuse personality disorder two or more clusters of personality disorder present and can also derive severe personality disorder for those of greatest risk Dimensional system of classifying personality disorders 42 Level of severity Description Definition by categorical system0 No personality disorder Does not meet actual or subthreshold criteria for any personality disorder1 Personality difficulty Meets sub threshold criteria for one or several personality disorders2 Simple personality disorder Meets actual criteria for one or more personality disorders within the same cluster3 Complex diffuse personality disorder Meets actual criteria for one or more personality disorders within more than one cluster4 Severe personality disorder Meets criteria for creation of severe disruption to both individual and to many in societyThere are several advantages to classifying personality disorder by severity 41 It not only allows for but also takes advantage of the tendency for personality disorders to be comorbid with each other It represents the influence of personality disorder on clinical outcome more satisfactorily than the simple dichotomous system of no personality disorder versus personality disorder This system accommodates the new diagnosis of severe personality disorder particularly dangerous and severe personality disorder DSPD Effect on social functioning edit Social function is affected by many other aspects of mental functioning apart from that of personality However whenever there is persistently impaired social functioning in conditions in which it would normally not be expected the evidence suggests that this is more likely to be created by personality abnormality than by other clinical variables 43 The Personality Assessment Schedule 44 gives social function priority in creating a hierarchy in which the personality disorder creating the greater social dysfunction is given primacy over others in a subsequent description of personality disorder Attribution edit Many who have a personality disorder do not recognize any abnormality and defend valiantly their continued occupancy of their personality role This group have been termed the Type R or treatment resisting personality disorders as opposed to the Type S or treatment seeking ones who are keen on altering their personality disorders and sometimes clamor for treatment 41 The classification of 68 personality disordered patients on the caseload of an assertive community team using a simple scale showed a 3 to 1 ratio between Type R and Type S personality disorders with Cluster C personality disorders being significantly more likely to be Type S and paranoid and schizoid Cluster A personality disorders significantly more likely to be Type R than others 45 Psychoanalytic theory has been used to explain treatment resistant tendencies as egosyntonic i e the patterns are consistent with the ego integrity of the individual and are therefore perceived to be appropriate by that individual In addition this behavior can result in maladaptive coping skills and may lead to personal problems that induce extreme anxiety distress or depression and result in impaired psychosocial functioning 46 Presentation editComorbidity edit There is a considerable personality disorder diagnostic co occurrence Patients who meet the DSM IV TR diagnostic criteria for one personality disorder are likely to meet the diagnostic criteria for another 47 Diagnostic categories provide clear vivid descriptions of discrete personality types but the personality structure of actual patients might be more accurately described by a constellation of maladaptive personality traits DSM III R personality disorder diagnostic co occurrence aggregated across six research sites 47 1721 Type of Personality Disorder PPD SzPD StPD ASPD BPD HPD NPD AvPD DPD OCPD PAPDParanoid PPD 8 19 15 41 28 26 44 23 21 30Schizoid SzPD 38 39 8 22 8 22 55 11 20 9Schizotypal StPD 43 32 19 4 17 26 68 34 19 18Antisocial ASPD 30 8 15 59 39 40 25 19 9 29Borderline BPD 31 6 16 23 30 19 39 36 12 21Histrionic HPD 29 2 7 17 41 40 21 28 13 25Narcissistic NPD 41 12 18 25 38 60 32 24 21 38Avoidant AvPD 33 15 22 11 39 16 15 43 16 19Dependent DPD 26 3 16 16 48 24 14 57 15 22Obsessive Compulsive OCPD 31 10 11 4 25 21 19 37 27 23Passive Aggressive PAPD 39 6 12 25 44 36 39 41 34 23 Sites used DSM III R criterion sets Data obtained for purposes of informing the development of the DSM IV TR personality disorder diagnostic criteria Abbreviations used PPD Paranoid Personality Disorder SzPD Schizoid Personality Disorder StPD Schizotypal Personality Disorder ASPD Antisocial Personality Disorder BPD Borderline Personality Disorder HPD Histrionic Personality Disorder NPD Narcissistic Personality Disorder AvPD Avoidant Personality Disorder DPD Dependent Personality Disorder OCPD Obsessive Compulsive Personality Disorder PAPD Passive Aggressive Personality Disorder The disorders in each of the three clusters may share with each other underlying common vulnerability factors involving cognition affect and impulse control and behavioral maintenance or inhibition respectively But they may also have a spectrum relationship to certain syndromal mental disorders 47 Paranoid schizoid or schizotypal personality disorders may be observed to be premorbid antecedents of delusional disorders or schizophrenia Borderline personality disorder is seen in association with mood and anxiety disorders with impulse control disorders eating disorders ADHD ASD or a substance use disorder Avoidant personality disorder is seen with social anxiety disorder Impact on functioning edit It is generally assumed that all personality disorders are linked to impaired functioning and a reduced quality of life QoL because that is a basic diagnostic requirement But research shows that this may be true only for some types of personality disorder In several studies higher levels of disability and lower QoL were predicted by avoidant dependent schizoid paranoid schizotypal and antisocial personality disorders This link is particularly strong for avoidant schizotypal and borderline PD However obsessive compulsive PD was not related to a reduced QoL or increased impairment A prospective study reported that all PD were associated with significant impairment 15 years later except for obsessive compulsive and narcissistic personality disorder 48 One study investigated some aspects of life success status wealth and successful intimate relationships It showed somewhat poor functioning for schizotypal antisocial borderline and dependent PD schizoid PD had the lowest scores regarding these variables Paranoid histrionic and avoidant PD were average Narcissistic and obsessive compulsive PD however had high functioning and appeared to contribute rather positively to these aspects of life success 9 There is also a direct relationship between the number of diagnostic criteria and quality of life For each additional personality disorder criterion that a person meets there is an even reduction in quality of life 49 Personality disorders especially dependent narcissistic and sadistic personality disorders also facilitate various forms of counterproductive work behavior including knowledge hiding and knowledge sabotage 50 Issues editIn the workplace edit Depending on the diagnosis severity and individual and the job itself personality disorders can be associated with difficulty coping with work or the workplace potentially leading to problems with others by interfering with interpersonal relationships Indirect effects also play a role for example impaired educational progress or complications outside of work such as substance abuse and co morbid mental disorders can be problematic However personality disorders can also bring about above average work abilities by increasing competitive drive or causing the individual with the condition to exploit his or her co workers 51 52 In 2005 and again in 2009 psychologists Belinda Board and Katarina Fritzon at the University of Surrey UK interviewed and gave personality tests to high level British executives and compared their profiles with those of criminal psychiatric patients at Broadmoor Hospital in the UK They found that three out of eleven personality disorders were actually more common in executives than in the disturbed criminals Histrionic personality disorder including superficial charm insincerity egocentricity and manipulation Narcissistic personality disorder including grandiosity self focused lack of empathy for others exploitativeness and independence Obsessive compulsive personality disorder including perfectionism excessive devotion to work rigidity stubbornness and dictatorial tendencies 53 According to leadership academic Manfred F R Kets de Vries it seems almost inevitable that some personality disorders will be present in a senior management team 54 In children edit Main article Personality development disorder Early stages and preliminary forms of personality disorders need a multi dimensional and early treatment approach Personality development disorder is considered to be a childhood risk factor or early stage of a later personality disorder in adulthood 55 In addition in Robert F Krueger s review of their research indicates that some children and adolescents do experience clinically significant syndromes that resemble adult personality disorders and that these syndromes have meaningful correlates and are consequential Much of this research has been framed by the adult personality disorder constructs from Axis II of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual Hence they are less likely to encounter the first risk they described at the outset of their review clinicians and researchers are not simply avoiding use of the PD construct in youth However they may encounter the second risk they described under appreciation of the developmental context in which these syndromes occur That is although PD constructs show continuity over time they are probabilistic predictors not all youths who exhibit PD symptomatology become adult PD cases 55 Versus normal personality edit See also Big Five personality traits and Myers Briggs Type Indicator Personality disordersThe issue of the relationship between normal personality and personality disorders is one of the important issues in personality and clinical psychology The personality disorders classification DSM 5 and ICD 10 follows a categorical approach that views personality disorders as discrete entities that are distinct from each other and from normal personality In contrast the dimensional approach is an alternative approach that personality disorders represent maladaptive extensions of the same traits that describe normal personality Thomas Widiger and his collaborators have contributed to this debate significantly 56 He discussed the constraints of the categorical approach and argued for the dimensional approach to the personality disorders Specifically he proposed the Five Factor Model of personality as an alternative to the classification of personality disorders For example this view specifies that Borderline Personality Disorder can be understood as a combination of emotional lability i e high neuroticism impulsivity i e low conscientiousness and hostility i e low agreeableness Many studies across cultures have explored the relationship between personality disorders and the Five Factor Model 57 This research has demonstrated that personality disorders largely correlate in expected ways with measures of the Five Factor Model 58 and has set the stage for including the Five Factor Model within DSM 5 59 In clinical practice individuals are generally diagnosed by an interview with a psychiatrist based on a mental status examination which may take into account observations by relatives and others One tool of diagnosing personality disorders is a process involving interviews with scoring systems The patient is asked to answer questions and depending on their answers the trained interviewer tries to code what their responses were This process is fairly time consuming DSM IV TR Personality disorders from the perspective of the five factor model of general personality functioning 47 1723 including previous DSM revisions Factors PPD SzPD StPD ASPD BPD HPD NPD AvPD DPD OCPD PAPD DpPD SDPD SaPDNeuroticism vs emotional stability Anxiousness vs unconcerned High Low High High High High Angry hostility vs dispassionate High High High High High Depressiveness vs optimistic High High Self consciousness vs shameless High Low Low Low High High High Impulsivity vs restrained High High High Low Low Vulnerability vs fearless Low High High High Extraversion vs introversion Warmth vs coldness Low Low Low Low High Low Low HighGregariousness vs withdrawal Low Low Low High Low Low HighAssertiveness vs submissiveness High High Low Low Low Activity vs passivity Low High High Low High Excitement seeking vs lifeless Low High High High Low Low Low HighPositive emotionality vs anhedonia Low Low High Low HighOpen mindedness vs closed minded Fantasy vs concrete High High Low HighAesthetics vs disinterest Feelings vs alexithymia Low High High Low Low HighActions vs predictable Low Low High High High High Low Low Low Low Ideas vs closed minded Low High Low Low Low Low Values vs dogmatic Low High Low High Agreeableness vs antagonism Trust vs mistrust Low Low High Low High Low High LowStraightforwardness vs deception Low Low Low Low High LowAltruism vs exploitative Low Low Low High High LowCompliance vs aggression Low Low Low High Low High LowModesty vs arrogance Low Low High High High High LowTender mindedness vs tough minded Low Low Low High LowConscientiousness vs disinhibition Competence vs laxness High Low Low HighOrder vs disorderly Low High High Low Dutifulness vs irresponsibility Low High Low High High Achievement striving vs lackadaisical Low High High LowSelf discipline vs negligence Low Low High Low High LowDeliberation vs rashness Low Low Low High High High LowAbbreviations used PPD Paranoid Personality Disorder SzPD Schizoid Personality Disorder StPD Schizotypal Personality Disorder ASPD Antisocial Personality Disorder BPD Borderline Personality Disorder HPD Histrionic Personality Disorder NPD Narcissistic Personality Disorder AvPD Avoidant Personality Disorder DPD Dependent Personality Disorder OCPD Obsessive Compulsive Personality Disorder PAPD Passive Aggressive Personality Disorder DpPD Depressive Personality Disorder SDPD Self Defeating Personality Disorder SaPD Sadistic Personality Disorder and n a not available As of 2002 there were over fifty published studies relating the five factor model FFM to personality disorders 60 Since that time quite a number of additional studies have expanded on this research base and provided further empirical support for understanding the DSM personality disorders in terms of the FFM domains 61 In her seminal review of the personality disorder literature published in 2007 Lee Anna Clark asserted that the five factor model of personality is widely accepted as representing the higher order structure of both normal and abnormal personality traits 62 The five factor model has been shown to significantly predict all 10 personality disorder symptoms and outperform the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory MMPI in the prediction of borderline avoidant and dependent personality disorder symptoms 63 Research results examining the relationships between the FFM and each of the ten DSM personality disorder diagnostic categories are widely available For example in a study published in 2003 titled The five factor model and personality disorder empirical literature A meta analytic review 64 the authors analyzed data from 15 other studies to determine how personality disorders are different and similar respectively with regard to underlying personality traits In terms of how personality disorders differ the results showed that each disorder displays a FFM profile that is meaningful and predictable given its unique diagnostic criteria With regard to their similarities the findings revealed that the most prominent and consistent personality dimensions underlying a large number of the personality disorders are positive associations with neuroticism and negative associations with agreeableness Openness to experience edit Main article Openness to experience At least three aspects of openness to experience are relevant to understanding personality disorders cognitive distortions lack of insight means the ability to recognize one s own mental illness here and impulsivity Problems related to high openness that can cause problems with social or professional functioning are excessive fantasising peculiar thinking diffuse identity unstable goals and nonconformity with the demands of the society 65 High openness is characteristic to schizotypal personality disorder odd and fragmented thinking narcissistic personality disorder excessive self valuation and paranoid personality disorder sensitivity to external hostility Lack of insight shows low openness is characteristic to all personality disorders and could help explain the persistence of maladaptive behavioral patterns 66 The problems associated with low openness are difficulties adapting to change low tolerance for different worldviews or lifestyles emotional flattening alexithymia and a narrow range of interests 65 Rigidity is the most obvious aspect of low openness among personality disorders and that shows lack of knowledge of one s emotional experiences It is most characteristic of obsessive compulsive personality disorder the opposite of it known as impulsivity here an aspect of openness that shows a tendency to behave unusually or autistically is characteristic of schizotypal and borderline personality disorders 66 Causes editCurrently there are no definitive proven causes for personality disorders However there are numerous possible causes and known risk factors supported by scientific research that vary depending on the disorder the individual and the circumstance Overall findings show that genetic disposition and life experiences such as trauma and abuse play a key role in the development of personality disorders Child abuse edit Child abuse and neglect consistently show up as risk factors to the development of personality disorders in adulthood 67 A study looked at retrospective reports of abuse of participants that had demonstrated psychopathology throughout their life and were later found to have past experience with abuse In a study of 793 mothers and children researchers asked mothers if they had screamed at their children and told them that they did not love them or threatened to send them away Children who had experienced such verbal abuse were three times as likely as other children who did not experience such verbal abuse to have borderline narcissistic obsessive compulsive or paranoid personality disorders in adulthood 68 The sexually abused group demonstrated the most consistently elevated patterns of psychopathology Officially verified physical abuse showed an extremely strong correlation with the development of antisocial and impulsive behavior On the other hand cases of abuse of the neglectful type that created childhood pathology were found to be subject to partial remission in adulthood 67 Socioeconomic status edit Socioeconomic status has also been looked at as a potential cause for personality disorders There is a strong association with low parental neighborhood socioeconomic status and personality disorder symptoms 69 In a 2015 publication from Bonn Germany which compared parental socioeconomic status and a child s personality it was seen that children who were from higher socioeconomic backgrounds were more altruistic less risk seeking and had overall higher IQs 70 These traits correlate with a low risk of developing personality disorders later on in life In a study looking at female children who were detained for disciplinary actions found that psychological problems were most negatively associated with socioeconomic problems 71 Furthermore social disorganization was found to be inversely correlated with personality disorder symptoms 72 Parenting edit Evidence shows personality disorders may begin with parental personality issues These cause the child to have their own difficulties in adulthood such as difficulties reaching higher education obtaining jobs and securing dependable relationships By either genetic or modeling mechanisms children can pick up these traits 69 Additionally poor parenting appears to have symptom elevating effects on personality disorders 69 More specifically lack of maternal bonding has also been correlated with personality disorders In a study comparing 100 healthy individuals to 100 borderline personality disorder patients analysis showed that BPD patients were significantly more likely not to have been breastfed as a baby 42 4 in BPD vs 9 2 in healthy controls 73 These researchers suggested Breastfeeding may act as an early indicator of the mother infant relationship that seems to be relevant for bonding and attachment later in life Additionally findings suggest personality disorders show a negative correlation with two attachment variables maternal availability and dependability When left unfostered other attachment and interpersonal problems occur later in life ultimately leading to development of personality disorders 74 Genetics edit Currently genetic research for the understanding of the development of personality disorders is severely lacking However there are a few possible risk factors currently in discovery Researchers are currently looking into genetic mechanisms for traits such as aggression fear and anxiety which are associated with diagnosed individuals More research is being conducted into disorder specific mechanisms 75 Neurobiological correlates hippocampus amygdala edit Research shows that several brain regions are altered in personality disorders particularly hippocampus up to 18 smaller a smaller amygdala malfunctions in the striatum nucleus accumbens and the cingulum neural pathways connecting them and taking care of the feedback loops on what to do with all the incoming information from the multiple senses so what comes out is anti social not according to what is the social norm socially acceptable and appropriate 76 77 Management editSpecific approaches edit There are many different forms modalities of treatment used for personality disorders 78 Individual psychotherapy has been a mainstay of treatment There are long term and short term brief forms Family therapy including couples therapy Group therapy for personality dysfunction is probably the second most used Psychological education may be used as an addition Self help groups may provide resources for personality disorders Psychiatric medications for treating symptoms of personality dysfunction or co occurring conditions Milieu therapy a kind of group based residential approach has a history of use in treating personality disorders including therapeutic communities The practice of mindfulness that includes developing the ability to be nonjudgmentally aware of unpleasant emotions appears to be a promising clinical tool for managing different types of personality disorders 79 80 There are different specific theories or schools of therapy within many of these modalities They may for example emphasize psychodynamic techniques or cognitive or behavioral techniques In clinical practice many therapists use an eclectic approach taking elements of different schools as and when they seem to fit to an individual client There is also often a focus on common themes that seem to be beneficial regardless of techniques including attributes of the therapist e g trustworthiness competence caring processes afforded to the client e g ability to express and confide difficulties and emotions and the match between the two e g aiming for mutual respect trust and boundaries Response of patients with personality disorders to biological and psychosocial treatments 47 36 Cluster Evidence for brain dysfunction Response to biological treatments Response to psychosocial treatmentsA Evidence for relationship of schizotypal personality to schizophrenia otherwise none known Schizotypal patients may improve on antipsychotic medication otherwise not indicated Poor Supportive psychotherapy may help B Evidence suggestive for antisocial and borderline personalities otherwise none known Antidepressants antipsychotics or mood stabilizers may help for borderline personality otherwise not indicated Poor in antisocial personality Variable in borderline narcissistic and histrionic personalities C None known No direct response Medications may help with comorbid anxiety and depression Most common treatment for these disorders Response variable Despite the lack of evidence supporting the benefit of antipsychotics in people with personality disorders 1 in 4 who do not have a serious mental illness are prescribed them in UK primary care Many people receive these medication for over a year contrary to NICE guidelines 81 82 Challenges edit The management and treatment of personality disorders can be a challenging and controversial area for by definition the difficulties have been enduring and affect multiple areas of functioning This often involves interpersonal issues and there can be difficulties in seeking and obtaining help from organizations in the first place as well as with establishing and maintaining a specific therapeutic relationship On the one hand an individual may not consider themselves to have a mental health problem while on the other community mental health services may view individuals with personality disorders as too complex or difficult and may directly or indirectly exclude individuals with such diagnoses or associated behaviors 83 The disruptiveness that people with personality disorders can create in an organisation makes these arguably the most challenging conditions to manage Apart from all these issues an individual may not consider their personality to be disordered or the cause of problems This perspective may be caused by the patient s ignorance or lack of insight into their own condition an ego syntonic perception of the problems with their personality that prevents them from experiencing it as being in conflict with their goals and self image or by the simple fact that there is no distinct or objective boundary between normal and abnormal personalities There is substantial social stigma and discrimination related to the diagnosis The term personality disorder encompasses a wide range of issues each with a different level of severity or impairment thus personality disorders can require fundamentally different approaches and understandings To illustrate the scope of the matter consider that while some disorders or individuals are characterized by continual social withdrawal and the shunning of relationships others may cause fluctuations in forwardness The extremes are worse still at one extreme lie self harm and self neglect while at another extreme some individuals may commit violence and crime There can be other factors such as problematic substance use or dependency or behavioral addictions Therapists in this area can become disheartened by lack of initial progress or by apparent progress that then leads to setbacks Clients may be perceived as negative rejecting demanding aggressive or manipulative This has been looked at in terms of both therapist and client in terms of social skills coping efforts defense mechanisms or deliberate strategies and in terms of moral judgments or the need to consider underlying motivations for specific behaviors or conflicts The vulnerabilities of a client and indeed a therapist may become lost behind actual or apparent strength and resilience It is commonly stated that there is always a need to maintain appropriate professional personal boundaries while allowing for emotional expression and therapeutic relationships However there can be difficulty acknowledging the different worlds and views that both the client and therapist may live with A therapist may assume that the kinds of relationships and ways of interacting that make them feel safe and comfortable have the same effect on clients As an example of one extreme people who may have been exposed to hostility deceptiveness rejection aggression or abuse in their lives may in some cases be made confused intimidated or suspicious by presentations of warmth intimacy or positivity On the other hand reassurance openness and clear communication are usually helpful and needed It can take several months of sessions and perhaps several stops and starts to begin to develop a trusting relationship that can meaningfully address a client s issues 84 Epidemiology editThe prevalence of personality disorder in the general community was largely unknown until surveys starting from the 1990s In 2008 the median rate of diagnosable PD was estimated at 10 6 based on six major studies across three nations This rate of around one in ten especially as associated with high use of cocaine is described as a major public health concern requiring attention by researchers and clinicians 85 The prevalence of individual personality disorders ranges from about 2 to 8 for the more common varieties such as obsessive compulsive schizotypal antisocial borderline and histrionic to 0 5 1 for the least common such as narcissistic and avoidant 86 47 A screening survey across 13 countries by the World Health Organization using DSM IV criteria reported in 2009 a prevalence estimate of around 6 for personality disorders The rate sometimes varied with demographic and socioeconomic factors and functional impairment was partly explained by co occurring mental disorders 87 In the US screening data from the National Comorbidity Survey Replication between 2001 and 2003 combined with interviews of a subset of respondents indicated a population prevalence of around 9 for personality disorders in total Functional disability associated with the diagnoses appeared to be largely due to co occurring mental disorders Axis I in the DSM 88 This statistic has been supported by other studies in the US with overall global prevalence statistics ranging from 9 to 11 89 90 A UK national epidemiological study based on DSM IV screening criteria reclassified into levels of severity rather than just diagnosis reported in 2010 that the majority of people show some personality difficulties in one way or another short of threshold for diagnosis while the prevalence of the most complex and severe cases including meeting criteria for multiple diagnoses in different clusters was estimated at 1 3 Even low levels of personality symptoms were associated with functional problems but the most severely in need of services was a much smaller group 91 Personality disorders especially Cluster A are found more commonly among homeless people 92 There are some sex differences in the frequency of personality disorders which are shown in the table below 93 206 The known prevalence of some personality disorders especially borderline PD and antisocial PD are affected by diagnostic bias This is due to many factors including disproportionately high research towards borderline PD and antisocial PD alongside social and gender stereotypes and the relationship between diagnosis rates and prevalence rates 86 Since the removal of depressive PD self defeating PD sadistic PD and passive aggressive PD from the DSM 5 studies analysing their prevalence and demographics have been limited Sex differences in the frequency of personality disorders Type of personality disorder Predominant sex NotesParanoid personality disorder Inconclusive In clinical samples men have higher rates whereas epidemiologically there is a reported higher rate of women 94 although due the controversy of paranoid personality disorder the usefulness of these results is disputed 86 95 Schizoid personality disorder Male About 10 more common in males 96 Schizotypal personality disorder Inconclusive The DSM 5 reports it is slightly more common in males although other results suggest a prevalence of 4 2 in women and 3 7 in men 1 97 Antisocial personality disorder Male About three times more common in men 98 with rates substantially higher in prison populations up to almost 50 in some prison populations 98 Borderline personality disorder Female Diagnosis rates vary from about three times more common in women to only a minor predominance of women over men This is partially attributable to increased rates of treatment seeking in women although disputed 86 94 Histrionic personality disorder Equal Prevalence rates are equal although diagnostic rates can favour women 99 94 86 Narcissistic personality disorder Male 7 7 for men 4 8 for women 100 101 Avoidant personality disorder Equal 86 Dependent personality disorder Female 0 6 in women 0 4 in men 94 86 Depressive personality disorder N A No longer present in the DSM 5 and no longer widely used 1 Passive aggressive personality disorder N A No longer present in the DSM 5 and no longer widely used 1 102 Obsessive compulsive personality disorder Inconclusive The DSM 5 lists a male to female ratio of 2 1 however other studies have found equal rates 103 Self defeating personality disorder Female 104 Removed entirely since the DSM IV not present in the DSM 5 and no longer widely used 1 Sadistic personality disorder Male 105 Removed entirely since the DSM IV not present in the DSM 5 and no longer widely used 1 History editDiagnostic and Statistical Manual history edit Personality disorder diagnoses in each edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual 18 93 17 DSM I DSM II DSM III DSM III R DSM IV TR DSM 5Inadequate a Inadequate Deleted 93 19 Schizoid a Schizoid Schizoid Schizoid Schizoid SchizoidCyclothymic a Cyclothymic Reclassified 93 16 19 Paranoid a Paranoid Paranoid Paranoid Paranoid Paranoid Schizotypal Schizotypal Schizotypal Schizotypal b Emotionally unstable c Hysterical 93 18 Histrionic Histrionic Histrionic Histrionic Borderline 93 19 Borderline Borderline BorderlineCompulsive c Obsessive compulsive Compulsive Obsessive compulsive Obsessive compulsive Obsessive compulsivePassive aggressive Passive dependent subtype c Deleted 93 18 Dependent 93 19 Dependent Dependent DependentPassive aggressive Passive aggressive subtype c Passive aggressive Passive aggressive Passive aggressive Deleted d 106 629 Passive aggressive Aggressive subtype c Explosive 93 18 Deleted 93 19 Asthenic 93 18 Deleted 93 19 Avoidant 93 19 Avoidant Avoidant Avoidant Narcissistic 93 19 Narcissistic Narcissistic NarcissisticAntisocial reaction e Antisocial Antisocial Antisocial Antisocial AntisocialDyssocial reaction e Sexual deviation e Reclassified 93 16 18 Addiction e Reclassified 93 16 18 AppendixSelf defeating Passive aggressive Negativistic 106 733 Personality disorder Trait specifiedSadistic Depressive Introduced Deleted a b c d DSM I Personality Pattern disturbance subsection 93 16 Also classified as a schizophrenia spectrum disorder in addition to personality disorder a b c d e DSM I Personality Trait disturbance subsection 93 16 Excluded from formal diagnoses and moved to Appendix a b c d DSM I Sociopathic personality disturbance subsection 93 16 Before the 20th century edit Personality disorder is a term with a distinctly modern meaning owing in part to its clinical usage and the institutional character of modern psychiatry The currently accepted meaning must be understood in the context of historical changing classification systems such as DSM IV and its predecessors Although highly anachronistic and ignoring radical differences in the character of subjectivity and social relations some have suggested similarities to other concepts going back to at least the ancient Greeks 3 35 For example the Greek philosopher Theophrastus described 29 character types that he saw as deviations from the norm and similar views have been found in Asian Arabic and Celtic cultures A long standing influence in the Western world was Galen s concept of personality types which he linked to the four humours proposed by Hippocrates Such views lasted into the eighteenth century when experiments began to question the supposed biologically based humours and temperaments Psychological concepts of character and self became widespread In the nineteenth century personality referred to a person s conscious awareness of their behavior a disorder of which could be linked to altered states such as dissociation This sense of the term has been compared to the use of the term multiple personality disorder in the first versions of the DSM 107 Physicians in the early nineteenth century started to diagnose forms of insanity involving disturbed emotions and behaviors but seemingly without significant intellectual impairment or delusions or hallucinations Philippe Pinel referred to this as manie sans delire mania without delusions and described a number of cases mainly involving excessive or inexplicable anger or rage James Cowles Prichard advanced a similar concept he called moral insanity which would be used to diagnose patients for some decades Moral in this sense referred to affect emotion or mood rather than ethics but it was arguably based in part on religious social and moral beliefs with a pessimism about medical intervention so social control should take precedence 108 These categories were much different and broader than later definitions of personality disorder while also being developed by some into a more specific meaning of moral degeneracy akin to later ideas about psychopaths Separately Richard von Krafft Ebing popularized the terms sadism and masochism as well as homosexuality as psychiatric issues The German psychiatrist Koch sought to make the moral insanity concept more scientific and in 1891 suggested the phrase psychopathic inferiority theorized to be a congenital disorder This referred to continual and rigid patterns of misconduct or dysfunction in the absence of apparent mental retardation or illness supposedly without a moral judgment Described as deeply rooted in his Christian faith his work established the concept of personality disorder as used today 109 20th century edit In the early 20th century another German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin included a chapter on psychopathic inferiority in his influential work on clinical psychiatry for students and physicians He suggested six types excitable unstable eccentric liar swindler and quarrelsome The categories were essentially defined by the most disordered criminal offenders observed distinguished between criminals by impulse professional criminals and morbid vagabonds who wandered through life Kraepelin also described three paranoid meaning then delusional disorders resembling later concepts of schizophrenia delusional disorder and paranoid personality disorder A diagnostic term for the latter concept would be included in the DSM from 1952 and from 1980 the DSM would also include schizoid schizotypal interpretations of earlier 1921 theories of Ernst Kretschmer led to a distinction between these and another type later included in the DSM avoidant personality disorder In 1933 Russian psychiatrist Pyotr Borisovich Gannushkin published his book Manifestations of Psychopathies Statics Dynamics Systematic Aspects which was one of the first attempts to develop a detailed typology of psychopathies Regarding maladaptation ubiquity and stability as the three main symptoms of behavioral pathology he distinguished nine clusters of psychopaths cycloids including constitutionally depressive constitutionally excitable cyclothymics and emotionally labile asthenics including psychasthenics schizoids including dreamers paranoiacs including fanatics epileptoids hysterical personalities including pathological liars unstable psychopaths antisocial psychopaths and constitutionally stupid 110 Some elements of Gannushkin s typology were later incorporated into the theory developed by a Russian adolescent psychiatrist Andrey Yevgenyevich Lichko who was also interested in psychopathies along with their milder forms the so called accentuations of character 111 In 1939 psychiatrist David Henderson published a theory of psychopathic states that contributed to popularly linking the term to anti social behavior Hervey M Cleckley s 1941 text The Mask of Sanity based on his personal categorization of similarities he noted in some prisoners marked the start of the modern clinical conception of psychopathy and its popularist usage 112 Towards the mid 20th century psychoanalytic theories were coming to the fore based on work from the turn of the century being popularized by Sigmund Freud and others This included the concept of character disorders which were seen as enduring problems linked not to specific symptoms but to pervasive internal conflicts or derailments of normal childhood development These were often understood as weaknesses of character or willful deviance and were distinguished from neurosis or psychosis The term borderline stems from a belief some individuals were functioning on the edge of those two categories and a number of the other personality disorder categories were also heavily influenced by this approach including dependent obsessive compulsive and histrionic 113 the latter starting off as a conversion symptom of hysteria particularly associated with women then a hysterical personality then renamed histrionic personality disorder in later versions of the DSM A passive aggressive style was defined clinically by Colonel William Menninger during World War II in the context of men s reactions to military compliance which would later be referenced as a personality disorder in the DSM 114 Otto Kernberg was influential with regard to the concepts of borderline and narcissistic personalities later incorporated in 1980 as disorders into the DSM Meanwhile a more general personality psychology had been developing in academia and to some extent clinically Gordon Allport published theories of personality traits from the 1920s and Henry Murray advanced a theory called personology which influenced a later key advocate of personality disorders Theodore Millon Tests were developing or being applied for personality evaluation including projective tests such as the Rorschach test as well as questionnaires such as the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory Around mid century Hans Eysenck was analysing traits and personality types and psychiatrist Kurt Schneider was popularising a clinical use in place of the previously more usual terms character temperament or constitution American psychiatrists officially recognized concepts of enduring personality disturbances in the first Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders in the 1950s which relied heavily on psychoanalytic concepts Somewhat more neutral language was employed in the DSM II in 1968 though the terms and descriptions had only a slight resemblance to current definitions The DSM III published in 1980 made some major changes notably putting all personality disorders onto a second separate axis along with mental retardation intended to signify more enduring patterns distinct from what were considered axis one mental disorders Inadequate and asthenic personality disorder categories were deleted and others were expanded into more types or changed from being personality disorders to regular disorders Sociopathic personality disorder which had been the term for psychopathy was renamed Antisocial Personality Disorder Most categories were given more specific operationalized definitions with standard criteria psychiatrists could agree on to conduct research and diagnose patients 115 In the DSM III revision self defeating personality disorder and sadistic personality disorder were included as provisional diagnoses requiring further study They were dropped in the DSM IV though a proposed depressive personality disorder was added in addition the official diagnosis of passive aggressive personality disorder was dropped tentatively renamed negativistic personality disorder 116 International differences have been noted in how attitudes have developed towards the diagnosis of personality disorder Kurt Schneider argued they were abnormal varieties of psychic life and therefore not necessarily the domain of psychiatry a view said to still have influence in Germany today British psychiatrists have also been reluctant to address such disorders or consider them on par with other mental disorders which has been attributed partly to resource pressures within the National Health Service as well as to negative medical attitudes towards behaviors associated with personality disorders In the US the prevailing healthcare system and psychoanalytic tradition has been said to provide a rationale for private therapists to diagnose some personality disorders more broadly and provide ongoing treatment for them 117 See also edit nbsp Psychology portalParanoid personality disorder Schizoid personality disorder Schizotypal personality disorder Antisocial personality disorder Borderline personality disorder Histrionic personality disorder Narcissistic personality disorder Avoidant personality disorder Dependent personality disorder Obsessive compulsive personality disorder Depressive personality disorder Passive aggressive personality disorder Sadistic personality disorder Self defeating personality disorderReferences edit a b c d e f g American Psychiatric Association 2013 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fifth ed Arlington VA American Psychiatric Publishing pp 646 49 ISBN 978 0 89042 555 8 Magnavita JJ 2004 Chapter 1 Classification prevalence and etiology of personality disorders Related issues and controversy Handbook of personality disorders theory and practice Wiley ISBN 0 471 20116 2 OCLC 52429596 a b Millon T Davis RD 1996 Disorders of Personality DSM IV and 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the original on 13 March 2010 Retrieved 9 August 2017 Nunes PM Wenzel A Borges KT Porto CR Caminha RM de Oliveira IR August 2009 Volumes of the hippocampus and amygdala in patients with borderline personality disorder a meta analysis Journal of Personality Disorders 23 4 333 345 doi 10 1521 pedi 2009 23 4 333 PMID 19663654 Kaya S Yildirim H Atmaca M May 2020 Reduced hippocampus and amygdala volumes in antisocial personality disorder Journal of Clinical Neuroscience 75 199 203 doi 10 1016 j jocn 2020 01 048 PMID 32334739 S2CID 210711736 Magnavita Jeffrey J 2004 Handbook of personality disorders theory and practice John Wiley and Sons ISBN 978 0 471 48234 5 Sng AA Janca A January 2016 Mindfulness for personality disorders Current Opinion in Psychiatry 29 1 70 76 doi 10 1097 YCO 0000000000000213 PMID 26651010 S2CID 235472 Creswell JD January 2017 Mindfulness Interventions Annual Review of Psychology 68 491 516 doi 10 1146 annurev psych 042716 051139 PMID 27687118 Antipsychotics are commonly prescribed to people with personality disorders contrary to guidelines NIHR Evidence 10 November 2022 doi 10 3310 nihrevidence 54520 S2CID 253467990 Hardoon S Hayes J Viding E McCrory E Walters K Osborn D March 2022 Prescribing of antipsychotics among people with recorded personality disorder in primary care a retrospective nationwide cohort study using The Health Improvement Network primary care database BMJ Open 12 3 e053943 doi 10 1136 bmjopen 2021 053943 PMC 8968526 PMID 35264346 Davison SE 2002 Principles of managing patients with personality disorder Advances in Psychiatric Treatment 8 1 1 9 doi 10 1192 apt 8 1 1 S2CID 6874579 McVey D amp Murphy N eds 2010 Treating Personality Disorder Creating Robust Services for People with Complex Mental Health Needs ISBN 0 203 84115 8 Lenzenweger MF September 2008 Epidemiology of personality disorders The Psychiatric Clinics of North America 31 3 395 403 vi doi 10 1016 j psc 2008 03 003 PMID 18638642 a b c d e f g Schulte Holthausen B Habel U October 2018 Sex Differences in Personality Disorders Current Psychiatry Reports 20 12 107 doi 10 1007 s11920 018 0975 y PMID 30306417 S2CID 52959021 Huang Y Kotov R de Girolamo G Preti A Angermeyer M Benjet C et al July 2009 DSM IV personality disorders in the WHO World Mental Health Surveys The British Journal of Psychiatry 195 1 46 53 doi 10 1192 bjp bp 108 058552 PMC 2705873 PMID 19567896 Lenzenweger MF Lane MC Loranger AW Kessler RC September 2007 DSM IV personality disorders in the National Comorbidity Survey Replication Biological Psychiatry 62 6 553 564 doi 10 1016 j biopsych 2006 09 019 PMC 2044500 PMID 17217923 Collins A Barnicot K Sen P June 2020 A Systematic Review and Meta Analysis of Personality Disorder Prevalence and Patient Outcomes in Emergency Departments Journal of Personality Disorders 34 3 324 347 doi 10 1521 pedi 2018 32 400 PMID 30307832 S2CID 52963562 Sansone RA Sansone LA April 2011 Personality disorders a nation based perspective on prevalence Innovations in Clinical Neuroscience 8 4 13 18 PMC 3105841 PMID 21637629 Yang M Coid J Tyrer P September 2010 Personality pathology recorded by severity national survey The British Journal of Psychiatry 197 3 193 199 doi 10 1192 bjp bp 110 078956 PMID 20807963 S2CID 14040222 Connolly AJ Cobb Richardson P Ball SA December 2008 Personality disorders in homeless drop in center clients PDF Journal of Personality Disorders 22 6 573 588 doi 10 1521 pedi 2008 22 6 573 PMID 19072678 Archived from the original PDF on 17 June 2009 Retrieved 31 January 2017 With regard to Axis II Cluster A personality disorders paranoid schizoid schizotypal were found in almost all participants 92 had at least one diagnosis and Cluster B 83 had at least one of antisocial borderline histrionic or narcissistic and C 68 had at least one of avoidant dependent obsessive compulsive disorders also were highly prevalent a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Widiger T 2012 The Oxford Handbook of Personality Disorders Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 973501 3 a b c d Grant BF Hasin DS Stinson FS Dawson DA Chou SP Ruan WJ et al July 2004 Prevalence correlates and disability of personality disorders in the United States results from the national epidemiologic survey on alcohol and related conditions The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 65 7 948 958 doi 10 4088 JCP v65n0711 PMID 15291684 Triebwasser J Chemerinski E Roussos P Siever LJ December 2013 Paranoid personality disorder Journal of Personality Disorders 27 6 795 805 doi 10 1521 pedi 2012 26 055 PMID 22928850 Coid J Yang M Tyrer P Roberts A Ullrich S May 2006 Prevalence and correlates of personality disorder in Great Britain The British Journal of Psychiatry 188 5 423 431 doi 10 1192 bjp 188 5 423 PMID 16648528 S2CID 4881014 Pulay AJ Stinson FS Dawson DA Goldstein RB Chou SP Huang B et al 16 May 2009 Prevalence correlates disability and comorbidity of DSM IV schizotypal personality disorder results from the wave 2 national epidemiologic survey on alcohol and related conditions Primary Care Companion to the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 11 2 53 67 doi 10 4088 pcc 08m00679 PMC 2707116 PMID 19617934 a b Alegria AA Blanco C Petry NM Skodol AE Liu SM Grant B et al July 2013 Sex differences in antisocial personality disorder results from the National Epidemiological Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions Personality Disorders 4 3 214 222 doi 10 1037 a0031681 PMC 3767421 PMID 23544428 Sprock J 2000 Gender Typed Behavioral Examples of Histrionic Personality Disorder Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment 22 2 107 122 doi 10 1023 a 1007514522708 ISSN 0882 2689 S2CID 141244223 Stinson FS Dawson DA Goldstein RB Chou SP Huang B Smith SM et al July 2008 Prevalence correlates disability and comorbidity of DSM IV narcissistic personality disorder results from the wave 2 national epidemiologic survey on alcohol and related conditions The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 69 7 1033 1045 doi 10 4088 jcp v69n0701 PMC 2669224 PMID 18557663 Grijalva E Newman DA Tay L Donnellan MB Harms PD Robins RW et al March 2015 Gender differences in narcissism a meta analytic review Psychological Bulletin 141 2 261 310 doi 10 1037 a0038231 PMID 25546498 Rotenstein OH McDermut W Bergman A Young D Zimmerman M Chelminski I February 2007 The validity of DSM IV passive aggressive negativistic personality disorder Journal of Personality Disorders 21 1 28 41 doi 10 1521 pedi 2007 21 1 28 PMID 17373888 Grant JE Mooney ME Kushner MG April 2012 Prevalence correlates and comorbidity of DSM IV obsessive compulsive personality disorder results from the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions Journal of Psychiatric Research 46 4 469 475 doi 10 1016 j jpsychires 2012 01 009 PMID 22257387 DSM III R p 373 DSM III R p 370 a b Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 4th ed 1994 Suryanarayan Geetha 2002 The History of the Concept of Personality Disorder and its Classification permanent dead link The Medicine Publishing Company Ltd Augstein HF July 1996 J C Prichard s concept of moral insanity a medical theory of the corruption of human nature Medical History 40 3 311 343 doi 10 1017 S0025727300061329 PMC 1037128 PMID 8757717 Gutmann P June 2008 Julius Ludwig August Koch 1841 1908 Christian philosopher and psychiatrist PDF History of Psychiatry 19 74 Pt 2 202 214 doi 10 1177 0957154X07080661 PMID 19127839 S2CID 2223023 Gannushkin P B 2000 Klinika psihopatij ih statika dinamika sistematika Izdatelstvo Nizhegorodskoj gosudarstvennoj medicinskoj akademii ISBN 5 86093 015 1 Lichko A E 2010 Psihopatii i akcentuacii haraktera u podrostkov Rech ISBN 978 5 9268 0828 2 Arrigo BA 1 June 2001 The Confusion Over Psychopathy I Historical Considerations International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 45 3 325 44 doi 10 1177 0306624X01453005 S2CID 145400985 Amy Heim amp Drew Westen 2004 Theories of personality and personality disorders Archived 11 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Lane C 1 February 2009 The Surprising History of Passive Aggressive Personality Disorder PDF Theory amp Psychology 19 1 55 70 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 532 5027 doi 10 1177 0959354308101419 S2CID 147019317 Hoermann Simone Zupanick Corinne E and Dombeck Mark January 2011 The History of the Psychiatric Diagnostic System Continued mentalhelp net Oldham JM 2005 Personality Disorders Focus 3 372 82 doi 10 1176 foc 3 3 372 inactive 31 January 2024 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of January 2024 link Kendell RE February 2002 The distinction between personality disorder and mental illness The British Journal of Psychiatry 180 2 110 115 doi 10 1192 bjp 180 2 110 PMID 11823318 S2CID 90434 Further reading editMarshall WL Serin R 1997 Personality Disorders In Turner SM Hersen R eds Adult Psychopathology and Diagnosis New York Wiley pp 508 541 Murphy N McVey D 2010 Treating Severe Personality Disorder Creating Robust Services for Clients with Complex Mental Health Needs London Routledge Archived from the original on 15 July 2011 Millon T Davis RD 1996 Disorders of personality DSM IV and beyond 2nd ed New York Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 01186 6 Yudofsky SC 2005 Fatal Flaws Navigating Destructive Relationships With People With Disorders of Personality and Character 1st ed Washington DC ISBN 978 1 58562 214 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link External links editLibrary resources about Personality disorders Resources in your library Personality Disorders Foundation National Mental Health Association personality disorder fact sheet Archived 16 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Personality Disorders information leaflet from The Royal College of Psychiatrists Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Personality disorder amp oldid 1218706482 Cluster A odd or eccentric disorders, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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