| Literature DB >> 26929090 |
Abstract
The term 'Borderline Personality Disorder' (BPD) refers to a psychiatric syndrome that is characterized by emotion dysregulation, impulsivity, risk-taking behavior, irritability, feelings of emptiness, self-injury and fear of abandonment, as well as unstable interpersonal relationships. BPD is not only common in psychiatric populations but also more prevalent in the general community than previously thought, and thus represents an important public health issue. In contrast to most psychiatric disorders, some symptoms associated with BPD may improve over time, even without therapy, though impaired social functioning and interpersonal disturbances in close relationships often persist. Another counterintuitive and insufficiently resolved question is why depressive symptoms and risk-taking behaviors can occur simultaneously in the same individual. Moreover, there is an ongoing debate about the nosological position of BPD, which impacts on research regarding sex differences in clinical presentation and patterns of comorbidity.In this review, it is argued that many features of BPD may be conceptualized within an evolutionary framework, namely behavioral ecology. According to Life History Theory, BPD reflects a pathological extreme or distortion of a behavioral 'strategy' which unconsciously aims at immediate exploitation of resources, both interpersonal and material, based on predictions shaped by early developmental experiences. Such a view is consistent with standard medical conceptualizations of BPD, but goes beyond classic 'deficit'-oriented models, which may have profound implications for therapeutic approaches.Entities:
Keywords: Borderline Personality Disorder; Life History Theory; adversity; deficit model; interpersonal opportunism; psychotherapy
Year: 2016 PMID: 26929090 PMCID: PMC4782519 DOI: 10.1093/emph/eow002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evol Med Public Health ISSN: 2050-6201
Descriptive diagnostic criteria of Borderline Personality Disorder according to the DSM-5
| Fear of abandonment |
| Unstable and intensive relationships with rapid changes between idealization and derogation |
| Identity disorder |
| Impulsivity (spending money, sexuality, substance abuse, other risk-taking behaviors) |
| Recurrent suicidal behavior, threat of committing suicide or self-injurious behavior |
| Emotional instability |
| Feelings of emptiness |
| Inappropriate anger, uncontrolled aggression |
| Stress-dependent paranoid ideation or dissociative symptoms |
A diagnosis is based on the presence of at least five of the following signs or symptoms
Prediction from LHT with regard to cognitive, emotional development, interpersonal behavior and physiology (modified after Del Giudice [25])
| ‘Fast’ LHS | ‘Slow’ LHS | |
|---|---|---|
| Cognition/emotions | Low empathy | High empathy |
| Heightened threat sensitivity | Low threat sensitivity | |
| Neuropsychology | Low tolerance of frustration | High tolerance of frustration |
| Poor executive control | Good executive control | |
| Personality | Neuroticism ↑ | Neuroticism ↓ |
| Agreeableness ↓ | Agreeableness ↑ | |
| Conscientiousness ↓ | Coscnientiousness ↑ | |
| Temperament and character | Novelty seeking ↑ | Novelty seeking ↓ |
| Harm avoidance ↓ | Harm avoidance ↑ | |
| Impulsivity ↑ | Impulsivity ↓ | |
| Risk proneness ↑ | Risk proneness ↓ | |
| Interpersonal behavior | Opportunistic | Altruistic |
| Low parenting effort | High parenting effort | |
| Unstable intimate relationshipsa | Stable intimate relationships | |
| Stress physiology | High cortisol | Low cortisol |
| Reduced HRV | High HRV | |
| Other biological markers | Early sexual maturation | Late sexual maturation |
| High ‘allostatic load’ | Low ‘allostatic load’ |
Supportive evidence for Borderline Personality Disorder as a ‘fast’ Life History Strategy (LHS).