What Is a Personality Disorder?

Overview of the 10 Psychological Disorders of Personality

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What is a personality disorder?  - allisoncobb1 photobucket
What is a personality disorder? - allisoncobb1 photobucket
Personality disorders are not as uncommon as you may think. As many as 15 percent of U.S. adults have one or more of these maladaptive mental illnesses.

What Is Personality?

The combined and consistent patterns of emotion, thought and behavior that make an individual unique comprise personality. This aspect of self differs from mood in that mood is a more changeable, often situational response, whereas personality is a relatively stable, life-long combination of traits.

Think of the overall list of general characteristics that those who know you would use if asked to describe what you’re like. Whether you are cheerful and optimistic or reclusive and brooding, these characteristics are a product of your heredity and early life experience, and are generally fixed by the time you reach adulthood.

What Is a Personality Disorder?

According to the DSM-IV-TR, psychology's premier diagnostic reference, those with psychological personality disorders have traits that cause them to feel and behave in socially distressing ways. Depending on the specific disorder, these personalities are generally described in negative terms such as hostile, detached, needy, antisocial or obsessive. People with personality disorders typically experience discord and instability in many aspects of their lives, and most are prone to blame others for their problems.

While many other psychological disorders fluctuate in terms of symptom presence and intensity, as with normal personality, personality disorders typically remain relatively constant throughout life, although they do vary in severity from individual to individual.

Causes of Personality Disorders

There is still much to be learned about the causes of disorders in this class. Although the specific origins of personality disorders are yet unclear, studies have consistently shown child abuse and neglect as being antecedent risks to the development of personality disorders in adulthood. However, history of abuse is not evident for all patients diagnosed with a personality disorder (Dobbert 2007).

Classification of Personality Disorders

There are currently 10 conditions that are considered personality disorders, some of which have very little in common. Mental health professionals typically group those personality disorder types that share characteristics into one of three clusters:

Cluster A Personality Disorders are those considered to be marked by odd, eccentric behavior. Paranoid (PPD), Schizoid and Schizotypal Personality Disorders are in this category.

Cluster B Personality Disorders are evidenced by dramatic, erratic behaviors and include Histrionic (HPD), Narcissistic (NPD), Antisocial (APD or ASPD) and Borderline (BPD) Personality Disorders.

Cluster C Personality Disorders are distinguished by the anxious, fearful behavior commonly seen in Obsessive-Compulsive (OCPD), Avoidant (APD) and Dependent (DPD) Personality Disorders.

Diagnosis of Personality Disorders

To be diagnosed with a disorder in this category, a psychologist or psychiatrist must evaluate the patient for the following:

  • Symptoms have been present for an extended period of time, are inflexible and pervasive, and are not a result of alcohol or drugs or another psychiatric disorder. The symptoms began to manifest in adolescence or early adulthood.
  • Symptoms cause significant distress or negative consequences in the person's life.

Symptoms are seen in at least two of the following areas:

  1. thoughts (ways of looking at the world, thinking about self or others)
  2. emotions (appropriateness, intensity, and range of emotional functioning)
  3. interpersonal functioning (relationships and interpersonal skills)
  4. impulse control

Prognosis for those with Personality Disorders

Although there's no cure for these conditions, therapy and medication can help many individuals manage their symptoms. However, those with personality disorders often have difficulty maintaining consistent psychiatric care due to poor relationships with medical and mental health professionals. Those suffering may refuse to take responsibility for their behavior or, as a manifestation of their illness, feel overly distrustful, deserving, or needy, taxing the doctor-patient relationship. These patients are also unlikely to faithfully follow a prescribed treatment regimen of regular psychiatric appointments and are often noncompliant with drug therapy. It may be small consolation, but the symptoms of some personality disorders do improve with age (Dobbert 2007, Hare 1999).

More Information on Personality Disorders

There are numerous on-line and in print resources with additional information on personality disorders, including: Psychology Prof Online, The Mayo Clinic: Mental Health Center and the article Personality Disorders: Brief Summary of the Ten Disorders of Personality.

This article describes definitions and clinical tools used by professionals to diagnose personality disorders. The contents of this article are not meant to be used for diagnosis and are not a substitute for professional help and counseling.

Additional PD Resources

American Psychiatric Association APA (2000) Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV-TR).

Dobbert, D. (2007) Understanding Personality Disorders: An Introduction. Greenwood Press.

Hare, R. D. (1999) Without Conscience: The Disturbing World of the Psychopaths among Us. Guiford Press.

Tami Port, MS, Tami Port

Tami Port - Tami Port is a college professor of cell and microbiology and creator of ScienceProfOnline.com, a free science education website.

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May 3, 2008 6:57 PM
Guest :
My ex boyfriend has boderline personality disorder and he stalks me constantly. I have been to the police on him several times and now i fear for my life. He is constantly going to my friends and telling them all kinds of lies. They think he is nuts but dont want to hurt his feelings but they are worried about me. I think he tried to poison me with mercury. I have all the symptoms of it.His 4th ex wife told me he has this disorder and that he is very co-dependent. I belive it because he wanted me at his house all the time. He constantly called me all hours of the day and night if i wasnt with him.
Feb 20, 2009 10:02 AM
Guest :
My ex boyfriend committed suicide a little over a month ago. He had borderline personality disorder. and He was super needy and clingy. and always threatened suicide and had two previous suicide attempts.
Sep 8, 2009 12:45 PM
Steve Simms :
I'm trying to "label" this "friend" of ours...we all know she has a problem. I started out as friends of her sister and she filled me in. OK, she's a 100% major flake. She is 29, lives at home. She'll call, you, text you, etc. make plans and then walk right by you an hour later like she doesn't know you. I've had strangers (sort of) ask me what is "her deal" and tell me similar stories. Her sister told me she was made fun of in school b/c she had some major freckles on her face and one side of her face looked strange. She would go home crying. But, now she's almost 30 and she just acts strange. She has zero real friends. I always treated her nice, talked to her, tried to be a good friend. But she started that flaky behavior and I got frustrated. She does this to EVERYBODY. She hangs out with people and then the next day just stops answering her phone. On the night before Katrina came she didn't answer her phone, even after I was with her all day. I thought that was odd at the time. Then her boyfriend left her, had some health issues and she started clinging to me for a friend. And then BAM, she started pulling that BS. One day she called me numerous times, made plans with me and friends, came to the meeting spot and walked right by me without saying a word. Then took off with some guys. I got angry, and next day she called and told me some lie...she's always lying and a bad lair to boot. Everyone asks me "what the heck is worng with her??" I'm trying to "label" it. Her sister told me some really strange stories about her, and stuff she did to her friends and why they stopped hanging out with her. Very strange behavior. Basically make plans and then stop answering her phone that night and the other friend would become frustrated and start calling her sister to see what the heck is going on. I believe in psychology but part of me just says "she's just a Flake, plain and simple." Like her sister says, she doesn't see anything wrong in her behavior. Everyone can see it. It's hard to explain in one post, but just take my word for it this is a strange girl. She has no feelings of guilt, or remorse. I feel bad for her but her life's disaster is her own doing. Anxiety disorder? I've been reading up on personality disorders. I honestly think she needs someone to talk to, and when asked her sister said her family has thought about getting her some help but really, they're just enablers to me. They make apologies for her behavior but do nothing,they're scared of her.

Read more: http://psychology.suite101.com/article.cfm/psychological_disorders#ixzz0QXt UM9JB
Apr 11, 2010 2:49 PM
Guest :
I found this overview very easy to understand and informative.. however this was questionable....

"People with personality disorders typically experience discord and instability in many aspects of their lives, and most are prone to blame others for their problems."

why, because i was diagnosed with personality disorder and i blame ME all the time and no one else. LOL! Not others.....
Sep 30, 2011 8:02 PM
Guest :
With all the confusions as to the true definitions of personality disorders, how can we be sure that all of us don't have such a disorder as many of the life functions are being used to id the supposed difference and our learned behaviors since birth. We can't have anger, excitement, sorrow, and other normal emotions without being labeled?
Why do we make such judgments of one another and as history has done wih persons born with birth anomalies, or children who have slipped through the system enduring abuse that they are anything but normal. The deaf people have a sigma of not being intelligent and crazy (using their communication ASL) etc.. Wheel chair people are considered not able to intelligently function just because they can't walk upright. It is that anyone with a medical problem that impairs their ability to function as "Normal" suffers from pschological disorders.
The psychological world needs to redefine each of the disorders and STOP! judging each other without truly listening and properly testing, examining and for the MAJOR part NO PREJUDGING AND LABELING!!!!!!!!!!
I am tired of being misdiagnosed, treated anything more than a human being with differences since the day I came into this existence. My differences are a product of my environment and the many people who were taught to be who they became and they could not make the right choices because of society's demands that this is this and not that and that should not exist.
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