Borderline Personality Disorder is a Personality Disorder
BPD is one of several personality disorders recognized by the American Psychiatric Association.
Personality disorders are psychological conditions that begin in adolescence or early adulthood, continue over many years, and cause a great deal of distress.
Personality disorders can also often interfere with a person's ability to enjoy life or achieve fulfillment in relationships, work, or school.
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What is borderline personality disorder (bpd)
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What is Borderline Personality
Disorder (BPD)?
(Personality Disorder 1A)
2. What is Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD)?
Borderline Personality Disorder is a Personality
Disorder
BPD is one of several personality disorders recognized by
the American Psychiatric Association.
Personality disorders are psychological conditions that
begin in adolescence or early adulthood, continue over
many years, and cause a great deal of distress.
Personality disorders can also often interfere with a
person's ability to enjoy life or achieve fulfillment in
relationships, work, or school.
Borderline Personality Disorder Symptoms
BPD is associated with specific problems in
interpersonal relationships,
self-image,
emotions,
behaviors, and
thinking.
3. Borderline Personality Disorder Symptoms
Relationships
People with BPD tend to have intense relationships characterized by a lot of
conflict,
arguments, and
break-ups.
BPD is also associated with strong sensitivity to abandonment, which
includes
intense fear of being abandoned by loved ones and
attempts to avoid real or imagined abandonment
Self-image
Individuals with BPD have difficulties related to the stability of their sense of
self.
They report many "ups and downs" in how they feel about themselves.
One moment they may feel good about themselves, but the next they may
feel they are bad or even evil.
Emotions -Emotional instability is a key feature of BPD.
Individuals with BPD may say that they feel as if they are on an emotional
roller coaster, with very quick shifts in mood (for example, going from feeling
okay to feeling extremely down or blue within a few minutes).
BPD is also associated with feelings of
4. Borderline Personality Disorder Symptoms
Behaviors
BPD is associated with a tendency to engage in risky and impulsive
behaviors, such as
going on shopping sprees,
drinking excessive amounts of alcohol or abusing drugs,
engaging in promiscuous sex, or
binge eating.
In addition, people with BPD are more prone to engage in self-harming
behaviors, such as cutting, or to attempt suicide.
Stress-Related Changes in Thinking
Under conditions of stress, people with BPD may experience
changes in thinking, including paranoid thoughts (for example, thoughts that
others may be trying to cause them harm), or
dissociation (feeling spaced out or numb).
Borderline Personality Disorder Causes
Like most psychological disorders, the exact cause of BPD is not known.
However, there is research to suggest that some combination of
nature (biology or genetics) and
nurture (environment) is at play.
5. Borderline Personality Disorder Symptoms
Borderline Personality Disorder Causes….
nurture (environment) is at play.
Research has shown that many people
diagnosed with BPD have experienced
childhood abuse or neglect, or
were separated from their caregivers at an early
age.
However, not all people with BPD had one of
these childhood experiences (and, many people
who have had these experiences do not have
BPD).
There is also evidence of
genetic contributions and
differences in brain structure and function in
6. Borderline Personality Disorder Treatment
Although at one time experts believed
that BPD was unlikely to respond to
treatment, research has now shown that
BPD is very treatable.
A variety of treatments are available for
BPD, and these treatments can be
delivered in outpatient or inpatient
(hospital) settings.
BPD is usually treated with a
combination of psychotherapy and
medication.
Hospitalization or more intensive
7. Living and Coping with Borderline Personality Disorder
It can be very difficult to live with the symptoms of BPD.
Intense emotional pain, and feelings of emptiness,
desperation,
anger,
hopelessness, and
loneliness are very common.
As a result of these experiences, many people with BPD report that they
think about suicide,or
have made suicide attempts or gestures.
Some individuals with BPD engage in self-harming behaviors such as
cutting or burning themselves in an attempt to reduce their emotional pain
(or, in the case of chronic emptiness, to "feel something.")
The symptoms of BPD can affect a variety of areas, including
work,
school,
relationships,
legal status, and
physical health.
However, despite the suffering that BPD can cause, many people with BPD
lead normal, fulfilling lives. There are many success stories!
8. Living and Coping with Borderline Personality Disorder
If you think that you or a loved one may suffer from BPD, it is very important
to seek the help of a licensed mental health professional, such as a mental
health counselor, social worker, psychologist, or psychiatrist.
It is important to remember that many of the symptoms of BPD are symptoms
that everyone experiences from time to time.
Also, some of the symptoms of BPD overlap with other mental and physical
conditions.
Only a licensed professional can diagnose BPD.
The good news is that once a diagnosis is made, there is hope.
Your therapist or doctor can help to determine a plan of action, which may
include psychotherapy, medications, or other treatments.
Research has shown that with good treatment, BPD symptoms can be
reduced significantly.
Many people who were once diagnosed with BPD no longer meet criteria for
the disorder with treatment and time.
Sources:
American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders, 4th ed,
text revision. Washington, DC, Author, 2000.
Kraus, G, and Reynolds, DJ. "The A-B-C's of the Cluster B's: Identifying, Understanding, and Treating Cluster B Personality
Disorders." Clinical Psychology Review 21: 345-373, 2001.