A pervasive pattern of instability of
interpersonal relationships, self-image, and affects, and marked
impulsivity beginning by early adulthood and present in a variety
of contexts, as indicated by five (or more) of the following:
1.
frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined abandonment. Note: Do
not include suicidal or self-mutilating behavior covered in
Criterion 5
2. a pattern of
unstable and intense interpersonal relationships
characterized by alternating between extremes of idealization
and devaluation.
3. identity disturbance:
markedly and persistently unstable self-image or sense of
self.
4. impulsivity in at least two
areas that are potentially self-damaging (e.g., spending, sex, substance abuse,
reckless driving, binge eating). Note: Do not include suicidal or
self-mutilating behavior covered in Criterion 5.
5. recurrent suicidal
behavior, gestures, or threats, or self-mutilating
behavior
6. affective instability due to a
marked reactivity of mood (e.g., intense episodic dysphoria, irritability, or anxiety usually
lasting a few hours and only rarely more than a few
days).
7. chronic feelings of
emptiness
8. inappropriate,
intense anger or difficulty controlling anger (e.g., frequent
displays of temper, constant anger, recurrent physical
fights)
9. transient, stress-related
paranoid ideation or severe dissociative symptoms
The DSM IV goes on to
say:
Diagnostic
Features
The essential feature of
Borderline Personality Disorder is a pervasive pattern of
instability of interpersonal relationships, self-image, and
affects, and marked impulsivity that begins by early adulthood and
is present in a variety of contexts.
Individuals with Borderline Personality
Disorder make frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined
abandonment (Criterion 1). The perception of impending separation
or rejection, or the loss of external structure, can lead to
profound changes in self-image, affect, cognition, and behavior.
These individuals are very sensitive to environmental
circumstances. They experience intense abandonment fears and
inappropriate anger even when faced with a realistic time-limited
separation or when there are unavoidable changes in plans (e.g.
sudden despair in reaction to a clinician’s announcing the end of
the hour; panic of fury when someone important to them is just a
few minutes late or must cancel an appointment). They may believe
that this "abandonment" implies they are "bad." These abandonment
fears are related to an intolerance of being alone and a need to
have other people with them. Their frantic efforts to avoid
abandonment may include impulsive actions such as self-mutilating
or suicidal behaviors, which are described separately in Criterion
5.
Individuals with
Borderline Personality Disorder have a pattern of unstable and
intense relationships (Criterion 2). They may idealize potential
caregivers or lovers at the first or second meeting, demand to
spend a lot of time together, and share the most intimate details
early in a relationship. However, they may switch quickly from
idealizing other people to devaluing them, feeling that the other
person does not care enough, does not give enough, is not "there"
enough. These individuals can empathize with and nurture other
people, but only with the expectation that the other person will
"be there" in return to meet their own needs on demand.
individuals are prone to
sudden and dramatic shifts in their view of others, who may
alternately be seen as beneficent supports or as cruelly punitive.
Such shifts often reflect disillusionment with a caregiver who
nurturing qualities had been idealized or whose rejection or
abandonment is expected.
There may be an identity disturbance
characterized by markedly and persistently unstable self-image or
sense of self (Criterion 3). There are sudden and dramatic shifts
in self-image, characterized by shifting goals, values, and
vocational aspirations. There may be sudden changes in opinions
and plans about career, sexual identity, values, and types of
friends. These individuals may suddenly change from the role of a
needy supplicant for help to a righteous avenger of past
mistreatment. Although they usually have a self-image that is
based on being bad or evil, individuals with this disorder may at
times have feelings that they do not exist at all. Such
experiences usually occur in situations in which the individual
feels a lack of meaningful relationship, nurturing and support.
These individuals may show worse performance in
unstructured work or school situations.
Individuals with this disorder display
impulsivity in at least two areas that are potentially
self-damaging (Criterion 4). They may gamble, spend money
irresponsibly, binge eat, abuse substances, engage in unsafe sex,
or drive recklessly. Individuals with Borderline Personality
Disorder display recurrent suicidal behavior, gestures, or
threats, or self-mutilating behavior (Criterion 5). Completed
suicide occurs in 8%-10% of such individuals, and self-mutilative
acts (e.g., cutting or burning) and suicide threats and attempts
are very common. Recurrent suicidality is often the reason that
these individuals present for help. These self-destructive acts
are usually precipitated by threats of separation or rejection or
by expectations that they assume increased responsibility.
Self-mutilation may occur during dissociative experiences and
often brings relief by reaffirming the ability to feel or by
expiating the individual’s sense of being evil.
Individuals with Borderline
Personality Disorder may display affective instability that is due
to a marked reactivity of mood (e.g., intense episodic dysphoria,
irritability, or anxiety usually lasting a few hours and only
rarely more than a few days) (Criterion 6). The basic dysphoric mood of those
with Borderline Personality Disorder is often disrupted by periods
of anger, panic, or despair and is rarely relieved by periods of
well-being or satisfaction. These episodes may reflect the
individual’s extreme reactivity troubled by chronic feelings of
emptiness (Criterion 7). Easily
bored, they may constantly seek something to do. Individuals with
Borderline Personality Disorder frequently express inappropriate,
intense anger or have difficulty controlling their anger
(Criterion 8). They may display extreme sarcasm, enduring
bitterness, or verbal outbursts. The anger is often elicited when
a caregiver or lover is seen as neglectful, withholding, uncaring,
or abandoning. Such expressions of anger are often followed by
shame and guilt and contribute to the feeling they have of being
evil. During periods of extreme stress, transient paranoid
ideation or dissociative symptoms (e.g., depersonalization) may
occur (Criterion 9), but these are generally of insufficient
severity or duration to warrant an additional diagnosis. These
episodes occur most frequently in response to a real or imagined
abandonment. Symptoms tend to be transient, lasting minutes or
hours. The real or perceived return of the caregiver’s nurturance
may result in a remission of symptoms.
Associated Features and
Disorders
Individuals with Borderline Personality Disorder
may have a pattern of undermining themselves at the moment a goal
is about to be realized (e.g.,
dropping out of school just before graduation; regressing severely
after a discussion of how well therapy is going; destroying a good relationship
just when it is clear that the relationship could last).
Some individuals develop psychotic-like
symptoms (e.g., hallucinations, body-image distortions, ideas of
reference, and hypnotic phenomena) during times of stress.
Individuals with this disorder may feel more secure with
transitional objects (i.e., a pet or inanimate possession) than in
interpersonal relationships. Premature death from suicide may
occur in individuals with this disorder, especially in those with
co-occurring Mood Disorders or Substance-Related Disorders.
Physical handicaps may result from self-inflicted abuse behaviors
or failed suicide attempts. Recurrent job losses, interrupted
education, and broken marriages are common. Physical and sexual
abuse, neglect, hostile conflict, and early parental loss or
separation are more common in the childhood histories of those
with Borderline Personality Disorder. Common co-occurring Axis I
disorders include Mood Disorders, Substance-Related Disorders,
Eating Disorders (notably Bulimia), Posttraumatic Stress Disorder,
and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder. Borderline
Personality Disorder also frequently co-occurs with the other
Personality Disorders.
Specific Culture, Age, and
Gender Features
The pattern of behavior seen in Borderline
Personality Disorder has been identified in many settings around
the world. Adolescents and young adults with identity problems
(especially when accompanied by substance abuse) may transiently
display behaviors that misleadingly give the impression of
Borderline Personality Disorder. Such situations are characterized
by emotional instability, "existential" dilemmas, uncertainty,
anxiety-provoking choices, conflicts about sexual orientation, and
competing social pressures to decide on careers. Borderline
Personality Disorder is diagnosed predominantly (about 75%) in
females.
Prevalence
The prevalence of Borderline Personality
Disorder is estimated to be about 2% of the general population,
about 10% among individuals seen in outpatient mental health
clinics, and about 20% among psychiatric inpatients. In ranges
from 30% to 60% among clinical populations with Personality
Disorders.
Course
There is considerable variability in the
course of Borderline Personality Disorder. The most common pattern
is one of chronic instability in early adulthood, with episodes of
serious affective and impulsive dyscontrol and high levels of use
of health and mental health resources. The impairment from the
disorder and the risk of suicide are greatest in the young-adult
years and gradually wane with advancing age. During their 30s and
40s, the majority of individuals with this disorder attain greater
stability in their relationships and vocational
functioning.
Familial
Pattern
Borderline Personality Disorder is about five
times more common among first-degree biological relatives of those
with the disorder than in the general population. There is also an
increased familial risk for Substance-Related Disorders,
Antisocial Personality Disorder, and Mood Disorders.
Differential
Diagnosis
Borderline Personality Disorder often
co-occurs with Mood Disorders, and when criteria for both are met,
both may be diagnosed. Because the cross-sectional presentation of
Borderline Personality Disorder can be mimicked by an episode of
Mood Disorder, the clinician should avoid giving an additional
diagnosis of Borderline Personality Disorder based only on
cross-sectional presentation without having documented that the
pattern of behavior has an early onset and a long-standing
course.
Other Personality Disorders may be confused
with Borderline Personality Disorder because they have certain
features in common. It is, therefore, important to distinguish
among these disorders based on differences in their characteristic
features. However, if an individual has personality features that
meet criteria for one or more Personality Disorders in addition to
Borderline Personality Disorder, all can be diagnosed. Although
Histrionic Personality Disorder can also be characterized by
attention seeking, manipulative behavior, and rapidly shifting
emotions, Borderline Personality Disorder is distinguished
by self-destructiveness, angry disruptions in close relationships,
and chronic feelings of deep emptiness and loneliness.
Paranoid ideas or illusions may be present in both
Borderline Personality Disorder and Schizotypal Personality
Disorder, but these symptoms are more transient, interpersonally
reactive, and responsive to external structuring in Borderline
Personality Disorder. Although Paranoid Personality Disorder and
Narcissistic Personality Disorder may also be characterized by an
angry reaction to minor stimuli, the relative stability of
self-image as well as the relative lack of self-destructiveness,
impulsivity, and abandonment concerns distinguish these disorders
from Borderline Personality Disorder. Although Antisocial
Personality Disorder and Borderline Personality Disorder are both
characterized by manipulative behavior, individuals with
Antisocial Personality Disorder are manipulative to gain profit,
power, or some other material gratification, whereas the goal in
Borderline Personality Disorder is directed more toward gaining
the concern of caretakers. Both Dependent Personality Disorder and
Borderline Personality Disorder are characterized by fear of
abandonment, however, the individual with Borderline Personality
Disorder reacts to abandonment with feelings of emotional
emptiness, rage, and demands, whereas the individual with
Dependent Personality Disorder reacts with increasing appeasement
and submissiveness and urgently seeks a replacement relationship
to provide caregiving and support. Borderline Personality Disorder
can further be distinguished from Dependent Personality Disorder
by the typical pattern of unstable and intense
relationships.
Borderline Personality Disorder must be
distinguished from Personality Change Due to a General Medical
Condition, in which the traits emerge due to the direct effects of
a general medical condition on the central nervous system. It must
also be distinguished from symptoms that may develop in
association with chronic substance use (e.g., Cocaine-Related
Disorder Not Otherwise Specified).
Borderline Personality Disorder should be
distinguished from Identity Problem...which is reserved for
identity concerns related to a developmental phase (e.g.,
adolescence) and does not qualify as a mental disorder."