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Personality Disorders

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Presentation on theme: "Personality Disorders"— Presentation transcript:

1 Personality Disorders
Adesola Ogunsakin

2 Personality Disorders?
Inflexible, maladaptive and rigidly pervasive pattern of behavior causing subjective distress and/or impaired functioning Person is usually not aware of problem Presents by early adulthood

3 General characteristics:
Inflexible, inability to adapt One way of responding Lifelong All areas of life are affected Maladaptive patterns of behavior Ego-syntonic- when a person’s behavior is acceptable to the aims of the ego and the related psychological needs of the individual

4 Cluster A- Odd or Eccentric
Paranoid Schizoid Schizotypal Cluster B- Dramatic and Emotional Histrionic Narcissistic Borderline Antisocial Cluster C- Anxious and Fearful Avoidant Obsessive-compulsive Dependent

5 Cluster A Higher prevalence in biologic relative of schizophrenics
Higher prevalence in males PARANOID SCHIZOID SCHIZOTYPAL

6 Cluster A- PARANOID Long-standing suspiciousness or mistrust of others
Reluctant to confide in others Preoccupied with issues of trust Reads hidden meaning into comments or events Carries grudges Differentiate from: Paranoid schizophrenic has hallucinations and formal thought disorders; PPD does not Delusional disorder, paranoid type has fixed, focal delusions; PPD does not Attributes involvement motives to others, suspicious M>W Increased incidence in families with schizophrenia Defense mechanism- projection

7 Cluster A- SCHIZOID Lifelong pattern of social withdrawal, and they like it that way Seen by others as eccentric, isolated, withdrawn Restricted emotional expression Isolated lifestyle, has no longing for others, ‘loner’ M>W Increased incidence in families with schizophrenia

8 Cluster A- SCHIZOTYPAL
Very odd, strange, weird Magical thinking, ideas of reference, illusions Social anxiety Suspiciousness Lack of close friends Incongruous affect Odd speech, social isolation May have short-lived psychotic episodes Weird, eccentric behavior, thought, speech Prevalence is 3% M>W

9 Cluster B Dramatic and Emotional
Genetic association with mood disorders & substance abuse HISTRIONIC NARCISSISTIC BORDERLINE ANTISOCIAL

10 Cluster B- HISTRIONIC Colorful, dramatic, extroverted
Inability to maintain long-lasting relationships Attention-seeking Seductive behavior Excessive emotion and attention seeking W>M Underdiagnosed in men

11 Cluster B- NARCISSISTIC
Grandiose sense of self-importance Preoccupation with fantasies of unlimited wealth, power, love Demands constant attention Fragile self-esteem, prone to depression Criticism met with indifference or rage Genuine surprise and anger when others don’t do as they want Can be charismatic Grandiose, over-concerned with issues of self-esteem common

12 Cluster B- BORDERLINE Females 2x more than males
Very unstable affect, behavior, self-image In constant state of crisis, chaos Self-detrimental impulsivity: promiscuity, gambling, overeating, substance abuse Unstable but intense interpersonal relationships: very dependent and hostile, love/hate Great problems with being alone Self-injurious behavior History of sexual abuse Common defenses: splitting, passive-aggressive Particularly incapable of tolerating anxiety Often coupled with mood disorder 50% commit suicide

13 Cluster B- BORDERLINE Instability of mood, self-image and relationships W>M Increased mood disorders in families Associated defense mechanism- splitting

14 Cluster B- ANTISOCIAL 3% males, 1% females Continual criminal acts
Inability to conform to social norm: truancy, delinquency, theft, running away Cant hold job, no enduring attachments, reckless, aggressive Onset before age 15; if younger than 19, diagnose as conduct disorder Does not recognize the rights of others Associates defense mechanism: superego lacunae

15 Cluster C Anxious and Fearful AVOIDANT OBSESSIVE-COMPULSIVE DEPENDENT

16 Cluster C- AVOIDANT Extreme sensitivity to rejection
Sees self as socially inept Excessive shyness, high anxiety levels Social isolation, but an intense, internal desire for affection and acceptance Wants the world to change, to be nicer, more accepting Tends to stay in same job, same life situation, same relationships Shy, timid, fears rejection Common Possible deforming illness

17 Cluster C- OBSESSIVE-COMPULSIVE
Orderliness, inflexible, perfectionist More common in males, firstborn, harsh discipline upbringing Loves lists, rules, order Unable to discard worn-out objects Doesn’t want change Excessively stubborn Lack sense of humor Wants to keep routine Differentiate from: Obsessive-compulsive anxiety disorder the anxiety disorder has obsessions and compulsions that are focal and acquired. Personality disorders are lifelong and pervasive Perfectionistic and inflexible, orderly, rigid M>W Increased concordance in identical twins Associated defense mechanism: undoing and reaction formation

18 Cluster C- DEPENDENT Gets others to assume responsibility
Subordinates own needs to others Cant express diasgreement Great fear of having to care for self May be linked to abusive spouse Dependent, submissive Common W>M

19 Sources Kaplan First Aid- USMLE STEP

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