Literature DB >> 20018125

Temperamental and acute symptoms of borderline personality disorder: associations with normal personality traits and dynamic relations over time.

C J Hopwood1, M B Donnellan, M C Zanarini.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Recent research suggests the utility of distinguishing temperamental and acute symptoms of borderline personality disorder (BPD). Temperamental symptoms, such as chronic anger and odd thinking, remit relatively slowly and have been hypothesized to reflect a hyperbolic predisposition to emotional pain and negativistic cognitions, whereas acute symptoms, such as substance abuse and chaotic relationships, remit relatively quickly and have been hypothesized to represent the consequences of maladaptations to triggering environmental events.
METHOD: The relationships of temperamental and acute BPD symptoms with normal personality traits and stability and dynamic associations over time across these symptom sets were tested in a 10-year longitudinal study of 362 patients with personality disorders.
RESULTS: Temperamental symptoms were associated with high neuroticism, whereas acute symptoms were associated with low agreeableness. These symptoms had similar rank-order stabilities and relative changes in symptom sets were reciprocally linked in a cross-lagged path model suggesting dynamic associations between temperamental and acute symptoms over time.
CONCLUSIONS: The distinction between temperamental and acute BPD symptoms is supported by differential relations of these symptom sets to normal personality traits. Moreover, these symptoms appear to be linked in a mutually reinforcing dynamic over time. This distinction should be kept in mind in future studies of the aetiology of BPD and in diagnostic and treatment considerations.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 20018125      PMCID: PMC3203736          DOI: 10.1017/S0033291709992108

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Med        ISSN: 0033-2917            Impact factor:   7.723


  19 in total

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Authors:  Leslie C Morey; Christopher J Hopwood; John G Gunderson; Andrew E Skodol; M Tracie Shea; Shirley Yen; Robert L Stout; Mary C Zanarini; Carlos M Grilo; Charles A Sanislow; Thomas H McGlashan
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6.  The representation of borderline, avoidant, obsessive-compulsive, and schizotypal personality disorders by the five-factor model.

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10.  The longitudinal course of borderline psychopathology: 6-year prospective follow-up of the phenomenology of borderline personality disorder.

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2.  Borderline personality disorder is equally trait-like and state-like over ten years in adult psychiatric patients.

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Review 3.  Long-term outcomes in borderline psychopathology: old assumptions, current findings, and new directions.

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Review 4.  Borderline personality disorder and depression: an update.

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5.  The relationship between borderline personality disorder and major depression in later life: acute versus temperamental symptoms.

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6.  Dynamic associations between borderline personality disorder and stressful life events over five years in older adults.

Authors:  Christopher C Conway; Michael Boudreaux; Thomas F Oltmanns
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7.  Correlates between Five-Factor Model traits and the Revised Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines dimensions in an adolescent clinical sample.

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