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Defining the mechanisms of Borderline Personality Disorder J. Clarkin and M. Posner (2005)

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Presentation on theme: "Defining the mechanisms of Borderline Personality Disorder J. Clarkin and M. Posner (2005)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Defining the mechanisms of Borderline Personality Disorder J. Clarkin and M. Posner (2005)

2 Introduction  Prevalence 0.3-0.7%  Suicidal and self-injurious behaviour  Prevalent, chronic, debilitating  No clear organic markers

3 Symptoms  At least 5 out of 9 (DSM-IV)  Identity diffusion  Impulsivity  Affect disregulation  But: symptoms are unstable

4 Temperament  „Individual differences in motor and emotional reactivity and self- regulation”  Influenced by genes and environment  Relates to negative affect, self- control, and the internal sense of self and others

5 Negative affect  Invades information processing  Influences individual and interpersonal experience

6 Poor self-regulation  Manifested in impulsive behaviour  Impulsive self-destructive behaviours and aggression  More heritable than BPD itself  Involvement of serotonergic activity (biological component)  Dysregulation of negative affect  Developmental course

7 Identity diffusion  Lack of integration of the concept of self and others  Pathology of object relations  Difficulties in commitment to work  Disturbances in sexual and love life  Anatomically connected to problems with self-regulation (midfrontal cortex)

8 Attachment  Early developmental experience influences the representations of self and others later on  BPD: early abuse, separation from parents, neglect  Insecure attachment style: dismissive or preoccupied

9 Working model  Focus on the information-processing system  Temperamental dispositions + environmental factors  BPD

10 Research plan  Borderline Personality Disorder patients compated to 2 groups Controls matched for temperament (rather difficult people) Controls with average temperament

11 Attention  Alerting  Orienting  Conflict resolution Here BPD patients are poorer than both control groups Temperament isn’t sufficient for the development of BPD

12 What may influence treatment?  Patient-therapist interaction  Neurocognitive factors  Emotional dysregulation  Sense of self and others

13 Treatment study  Random assignment to one of 3 groups Manualized psychoanalytic treatment Cognitive behavioural treatment Pharmacological treatment and counselling  Measurements: Self-reported temperament Activation of the amygdala Executive attention

14 Conclusions  Relating symptoms to enduring temperamental characteristics  Focus on the developmental aspect  Interaction between genes, temperament, and experience


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