Literature DB >> 32713398

Borderline personality disorder: stress reactivity or stress generation? A prospective dimensional study.

Timothy A Allen1, Alexandre Y Dombrovski1, Paul H Soloff1, Michael N Hallquist2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Individuals diagnosed with borderline personality disorder (BPD) often describe their lives as stressful and unpredictable. However, it is unclear whether the adversity faced by those with BPD is a product of stress reactivity or stress generation. Here, we examined the dynamic, prospective associations between BPD and stressful life events over 3 years. Given the heterogeneity present in BPD, we sought to understand which empirically derived dimensions of this heterogeneous disorder explain stress reactivity v. stress generation.
METHODS: Participants included 355 individuals diagnosed with BPD and followed longitudinally at three annual assessments. Auto-regressive cross-lagged panel models were used to examine prospective associations between stressful life events and three latent dimensions implicated in BPD: negative affect, disinhibition, and antagonism.
RESULTS: Antagonism and disinhibition, but not negative affect, prospectively predicted dependent stressful life events (events the individual may have some role in). Evidence for decompensation under stress was more tenuous, with independent stressful life events (those presumably outside the individual's control) predicting increases in negative affect.
CONCLUSIONS: Our longitudinal study of a well-characterized clinical sample found more evidence for stress generation than for stress-induced decompensation in BPD. Stress generation in BPD is driven by externalizing dimensions: antagonism and disinhibition. These results highlight the utility of empirically derived dimensions for parsing heterogeneity present in BPD, leading to improvements in diagnostic evaluation, clinical prediction, and individualized approaches to treatment planning.

Entities:  

Keywords:  antagonism; borderline personality disorder; disinhibition; life stress; negative affect

Year:  2020        PMID: 32713398      PMCID: PMC8988096          DOI: 10.1017/S003329172000255X

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


  29 in total

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4.  Dependent stressful life events and prior depressive episodes in the prediction of major depression: the problem of causal inference in psychiatric epidemiology.

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5.  Interpersonal problems and negative affect in Borderline Personality and Depressive Disorders in daily life.

Authors:  Johanna Hepp; Sean P Lane; Ryan W Carpenter; Inga Niedtfeld; Whitney C Brown; Timothy J Trull
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6.  Symptoms of borderline personality disorder predict interpersonal (but not independent) stressful life events in a community sample of older adults.

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7.  A meta-analytic review of the relationships between the five-factor model and DSM-IV-TR personality disorders: a facet level analysis.

Authors:  Douglas B Samuel; Thomas A Widiger
Journal:  Clin Psychol Rev       Date:  2008-07-04

8.  Childhood adversities and first onset of psychiatric disorders in a national sample of US adolescents.

Authors:  Katie A McLaughlin; Jennifer Greif Green; Michael J Gruber; Nancy A Sampson; Alan M Zaslavsky; Ronald C Kessler
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  2012-11

9.  Age variation in life events and their relationship with common mental disorders in a national survey population.

Authors:  Vesna Jordanova; Robert Stewart; David Goldberg; Paul E Bebbington; Traolach Brugha; Nicola Singleton; James E B Lindesay; Rachel Jenkins; Martin Prince; Howard Meltzer
Journal:  Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol       Date:  2007-05-22       Impact factor: 4.328

10.  Clarifying interpersonal heterogeneity in borderline personality disorder using latent mixture modeling.

Authors:  Aidan G C Wright; Michael N Hallquist; Jennifer Q Morse; Lori N Scott; Stephanie D Stepp; Kimberly A Nolf; Paul A Pilkonis
Journal:  J Pers Disord       Date:  2013-04
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Review 1.  Search for solutions, learning, simulation, and choice processes in suicidal behavior.

Authors:  Alexandre Y Dombrovski; Michael N Hallquist
Journal:  Wiley Interdiscip Rev Cogn Sci       Date:  2021-05-18
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