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      The borderline diagnosis I: psychopathology, comorbidity, and personality structure.

      Biological Psychiatry
      Borderline Personality Disorder, diagnosis, epidemiology, psychology, Comorbidity, Humans, Personality, Psychopathology

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          Abstract

          Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a complex and serious mental disorder associated with severe functional impairment, substantial treatment utilization, and a high rate of mortality by suicide. Recently, BPD has become a focus of intensifying study. In Part I of this three-part article meant to provide a foundation to researchers on the current status of the borderline diagnosis and prospects for its future development, we examine the psychopathology, comorbidity, and personality structure of BPD. Although the descriptive characteristics of BPD are well-represented by DSM-IV diagnostic criteria, other important aspects of BPD psychopathology are not included. The descriptive criteria in conjunction with semistructured interviews have, however, increased the ability of investigators to diagnose BPD as reliably as many Axis I disorders. Frequent comorbidity of BPD with Axis I disorders necessitates a broad assessment of psychopathology to help account for clinical heterogeneity. Because of the absence of evidence of the validity of the diagnostic threshold for a categorical diagnosis of BPD, and because of the heterogeneity within the diagnosis, investigators should also supplement their DSM-IV diagnoses with assessments of underlying personality trait structures. Although there are a number of competing models of personality structure, they have remarkable convergence on a set of three to five basic personality dimensions.

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          Most cited references90

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          Borderline personality organization.

          O Kernberg (1967)
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            Differential diagnosis of personality disorders by the seven-factor model of temperament and character.

            We used multiaxial structured interviews and questionnaires to evaluate the ability of self-reports on seven personality dimensions to predict independent interview diagnoses of DSM-III-R personality disorders. We studied 136 consecutive adult psychiatric inpatients, excluding those with psychosis, organic mental disorders, and severe agitation. Sixty-six patients had interview diagnoses of DSM-III-R personality disorders. Most also had mood disorders. We confirmed the hypotheses that self-reports of low self-directedness and cooperativeness strongly predicted the number of personality symptoms in all interview categories, whereas the other factors distinguished among subtypes as predicted. Self-directedness and cooperativeness also predicted the presence of any personality disorder by differentiating patients varying in risk from 11% to 94%. Patients in clusters A, B, and C were differentiated by low reward dependence, high novelty seeking, and high harm avoidance, respectively. We conclude that low self-directedness and cooperativeness are core features of all personality disorders and are validly measured by the seven-factor Temperament and Character Inventory, but not the five-factor Neuroticism-Extraversion-Openness inventory. Each DSM-III-R personality disorder category is associated with a unique profile of scores in the seven-factor model, providing an efficient guide to differential diagnosis and treatment.
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              The Revised Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines: Discriminating BPD from other Axis II Disorders

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