Psycho-Babble Medication Thread 987313

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Management Of Borderline Personality

Posted by Phillipa on June 6, 2011, at 21:25:57

Treatment and criteria for borderline personality discussed. Phillipa

From Medscape Medical News
Management of Borderline Personality Disorder Reviewed
Laurie Barclay, MD

Authors and Disclosures

June 6, 2011 The response of borderline personality disorder (BPD) to psychotherapy is usually favorable, but the benefits of pharmacotherapy are usually only modest, and adverse effects may be considerable, according to a clinical review reported in the May 26 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

"...BPD is present in about 6% of primary care patients and persons in community-based samples and in 15 to 20% of patients in psychiatric hospitals and outpatient clinics," writes John G. Gunderson, MD, from the Psychosocial and Personality Research Program, McLean Hospital in Belmont, Massachusetts. "Patients with BPD usually enter treatment facilities after suicide attempts or after episodes of deliberate self-injury. Such episodes result in an average hospital stay of 6.3 days per year and nearly 1 emergency room visit every 2 years, rates that are 6 to 12 times those among patients with a major depressive disorder."

Criteria for BPD Diagnosis

For a diagnosis of BPD, at least 5 of the following criteria must be met:

Interpersonal hypersensitivity:
◦Frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined abandonment;
◦Fluctuating between extremes of idealization and devaluation, resulting in a pattern of unstable and intense interpersonal relationships;
Affective dysregulation:
◦Marked mood reactivity, such as intense episodic dysphoria, irritability, or anxiety, usually lasting for a few hours and rarely more than a few days, causing affective instability;
◦Inappropriate, intense anger or problems with anger management, resulting in frequent displays of temper, constant anger, and/or recurrent physical fights;
◦Chronic feelings of emptiness;
Impulsivity:
◦Impulsive, potentially self-damaging behavior in 2 or more of the following areas: excessive spending, inappropriate sexual behavior, substance abuse, reckless driving, binge eating;
◦Recurrent suicidal behavior, gestures, or threats or self-mutilating behavior;
Other criteria:
◦Disturbed sense of identity with markedly, persistently unstable self-image or sense of self;
◦Transient, stress-related paranoid ideation or severe dissociative symptoms.
BPD Treatments

Four evidence-based treatments for BPD are dialectical behavior therapy, mentalization-based therapy, transference-focused psychotherapy, and general psychiatric management. Dialectical behavior therapy involves individual as well as group behavioral therapy, with didactics and homework on mood monitoring and stress management. This therapy is the best validated and easiest to learn of the psychotherapies. The therapist acts as a coach with extensive availability to instruct the patient in how to regulate feelings and behaviors.

Mentalization-based therapy is a cognitive or psychodynamic therapy including individual as well as group therapy. While assuming a "not-knowing" stance, the therapist insists that the patient "mentalize," or examine and label his or her own experiences and those of others. This emphasis on thinking before reacting may be a process central to all effective therapies.

Transference-focused psychotherapy, which is developed from psychoanalysis, is an individual psychotherapy with twice-weekly sessions. It highlights interpretation of motives or feelings unknown to the patient and focuses on the patient's misunderstanding of others, particularly of the therapist in the form of transference. This form of therapy is the least supportive and the most difficult to learn.

General psychiatric management, which is conducted once weekly, is a form of psychodynamic therapy developed from the American Psychiatric Association guidelines and the basic BPD treatment textbook. Although the main focus is on the patient's interpersonal relationships, this therapy may sometimes involve family interventions and pharmacologic treatment. General psychiatric management is the least theory bound and easiest to learn of the therapies, but it is also the least well evaluated.

"Selective serotonin-reuptake inhibitors and other antidepressants are frequently prescribed to patients with BPD, but in randomized trials such drugs have had little if any benefit over placebo," Dr. Gunderson writes.

"Data from randomized trials support the benefits of atypical antipsychotic agents (e.g., olanzapine) and mood stabilizers (e.g., lamotrigine), particularly for reducing impulsivity and aggression, in patients with BPD. However, these effects are typically modest, and side effects are common (e.g., obesity and associated hypertension and diabetes with atypical antipsychotic agents or sedation and possibly toxic effects to kidneys and during pregnancy with mood stabilizers)."

Regardless of which therapy is chosen to treat the patient with BPD, there are shared basic principles of treatment. One primary clinician needs to be designated to discuss the diagnosis with the patient, to evaluate progress, to monitor safety, and to oversee communications with other providers and with family members.

A therapeutic structure is essential, with the clinician establishing and maintaining goals and roles. This especially applies to the therapist identifying the limits of his or her availability and creating a management plan to address the patient's future suicidal impulses or other emergencies. Another basic therapeutic need is for the clinician's support of the patient, validating his or her extreme distress and desperation, and providing encouragement about the patient's potential to change.

Also basic to any treatment of BPD is the need for the patient's involvement in the therapeutic process as well as for the clinician's intervention. Both should acknowledge that progress depends on the patient's active efforts to assume control for his or her feelings and behavior, and that the clinician should play an active role. This includes interrupting silences and tangential discussions, focusing on immediate situations such as angry or dismissive responses, and helping the patient connect his or her feelings to rejections, loss of supportive relationships or situations, and other past events.

When treating the patient with BPD, the clinician should express concern about and listen patiently to the patient's threats of suicide or other self-harming acts but should respond judiciously. It may not always be necessary to recommend hospitalization.

Finally, treatment of the BPD poses a special challenge in that the patient's interpersonal style involves alternating between idealization or devaluation. Accordingly, the clinician needs to be self-aware of countertransference, or the predictable inclination to rescue or punish the patient. Because countertransference can disrupt treatment, the clinician should be ready to consult with colleagues and/or to seek outside consultation for the patient if it develops.

"Once the diagnosis is made, clinicians should educate the patient about genetic and environmental contributors and the likelihood of a favorable response to psychotherapy," Dr. Gunderson concludes. "If the patient has relied on medications for treatment, [he or] she should have them reevaluated, and a referral should be made for psychotherapy with a clinician who is experienced in BPD. A thoughtful evaluation of the patients self-harming behaviors can avert unnecessary hospitalization."

Dr. Gunderson has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

N Engl J Med. 2011;364:2037-2042

 

Re: Management Of Borderline Personality » Phillipa

Posted by floatingbridge on June 7, 2011, at 0:19:07

In reply to Management Of Borderline Personality, posted by Phillipa on June 6, 2011, at 21:25:57

I found this helpful, Phillipa. Thank you.

 

Re: Management Of Borderline Personality » floatingbridge

Posted by Phillipa on June 7, 2011, at 11:39:27

In reply to Re: Management Of Borderline Personality » Phillipa, posted by floatingbridge on June 7, 2011, at 0:19:07

FB it's only an article. I don't know so much conflicting stuff out there. Love the pic snorkel. Love Phillipa

 

Re: Management Of Borderline Personality » Phillipa

Posted by floatingbridge on June 7, 2011, at 12:02:50

In reply to Re: Management Of Borderline Personality » floatingbridge, posted by Phillipa on June 7, 2011, at 11:39:27

Borderline PD is so debated, and I certainly don't know. I read about it because cptsd and BPD overlap greatly.

I'm glad psychiatry is moving past the pejorative associations with this disorder and stepping up to the task of treatment w/o judgment.

 

Re: Management Of Borderline Personality

Posted by sigismund on June 7, 2011, at 15:25:11

In reply to Management Of Borderline Personality, posted by Phillipa on June 6, 2011, at 21:25:57

I get this feeling of there being no theoretical basis. It irritates me. If we could start from a Buddhist perspective and work our way up I might feel better about it. I start thinking about the world outside the West and our foreign policies.

 

Re: Management Of Borderline Personality

Posted by Christ_empowered on June 7, 2011, at 15:44:09

In reply to Re: Management Of Borderline Personality, posted by sigismund on June 7, 2011, at 15:25:11

Borderline always bothered me. I've known plenty of bright, conflicted young women whose (usually male) psychiatrists tell them they have "borderline," when really they're just smart, possibly smarter than their shrinks. I think 70%+ of the BPD patients are female, so its really like a modern day "hysteria" couched in clinical-sounding jargon. At the same time, you can't deny that some people with the diagnosis do have real problems. But couldn't it just be a "soft" bipolar? Or an expression of feminine angst in the modern world?

 

Re: Management Of Borderline Personality

Posted by sigismund on June 7, 2011, at 19:05:15

In reply to Re: Management Of Borderline Personality, posted by Christ_empowered on June 7, 2011, at 15:44:09

Soft bipolar bothers me too.

I have known some people who have clearly had something like that. One young man talked a lot and didn't sleep much for 9 months before it stopped. Another woman started counting trees and stuff like that. Something is happening there. (Whereas one young man told me the Chinese Communist Party had placed electrodes in his brain and peace or war depended on his thought processes. Something is definitely happening there.) But every man and his dog gets a bipolar diagnosis these days. I don't deny they have real problems. I just wonder if the diagnosis helps.

 

Re: Management Of Borderline Personality

Posted by Phillipa on June 7, 2011, at 20:14:32

In reply to Re: Management Of Borderline Personality, posted by sigismund on June 7, 2011, at 19:05:15

I just know the ones I delt with used splitting of the staff all the time and suicide gestures like superficial cutting or drug overdose without taking anything lethal. Would arrive on unit cry through the admission and 15 minutes later be laughing with other patients in community room. My experience only. Phillipa

 

Re: Management Of Borderline Personality » Phillipa

Posted by floatingbridge on June 7, 2011, at 22:55:14

In reply to Re: Management Of Borderline Personality, posted by Phillipa on June 7, 2011, at 20:14:32

Well I arrived in the psychiatric world dx'd as cyclothymic. I've read books about BPD and fit the bill except for the self-injurious part and suicide attempts, gestures, whatever. I won't debate the real suffering of people with this dx and agree that something is going on. The idea of a personality disorder seems so wrong because it hinders any biological research and invites moral judgement. Borderline people are not across the board nasty. No. Nasty people come in all stripes and some of them are doctors. For some reason some nasty people get to be in charge of entire nations or
someone's psychiatric treatment. They had the wiring to get through the rigors of med school or politicial *ss kissing.

Borderlines who seek treatment are very smart enough to
know that what the majority of people take for granted
waking up each day, a stable sense of self, remains elusive at
best.

Blessed are the folks who do not have to understand or endure this. May everyone learn to stop pointing fingers at others.


Do I sound angry? I guess I'm sensitized to this issue. I certainly don't mean people onboard here are pointing fingers. I mean, who will stick up for the psychiatric scapegoat? (Of course people with Borderline dx's accomplish great things, too. Med school included.)


A decent book is 'Through the Mirror' (I think that's it) if anyone needs to place a face and heart and mind to BPD.

I had a grandmother who I suspect fit the dx down to 'staged' suicidal 'gestures'. She frickin ruined my mother's life. I was too young to ever talk to her; I didn't even know about her life until she died. About how HER mother reminded her regularly that she wished she had fled Eastern Europe with her brother (to young to take the journey) and died in a bomb raid.

So where does it come from? Biogenic? Familial pathology? Both?

Whew.

fb

 

Re: Management Of Borderline Personality

Posted by floatingbridge on June 7, 2011, at 22:56:52

In reply to Re: Management Of Borderline Personality, posted by Phillipa on June 7, 2011, at 20:14:32

Well I arrived in the psychiatric world dx'd as cyclothymic. I've read books about BPD and fit the bill except for the self-injurious part and suicide attempts, gestures, whatever. I won't debate the real suffering of people with this dx and agree that something is going on. The idea of a personality disorder seems so wrong because it hinders any biological research and invites moral judgement. Borderline people are not across the board nasty. No. Nasty people come in all stripes and some of them are doctors. For some reason some nasty people get to be in charge of entire nations or
someone's psychiatric treatment. They had the wiring to get through the rigors of med school or politicial *ss kissing.

Borderlines who seek treatment are very smart enough to
know that what the majority of people take for granted
waking up each day, a stable sense of self, remains elusive at
best.

Blessed are the folks who do not have to understand or endure this. May everyone learn to stop pointing fingers at others.


Do I sound angry? I guess I'm sensitized to this issue. I certainly don't mean people onboard here are pointing fingers. I mean, who will stick up for the psychiatric scapegoat? (Of course people with Borderline dx's accomplish great things, too. Med school included.)


A decent book is 'Through the Mirror' (I think that's it) if anyone needs to place a face and heart and mind to BPD.

I had a grandmother who I suspect fit the dx down to 'staged' suicidal 'gestures'. She frickin ruined my mother's life. I was too young to ever talk to her; I didn't even know about her life until she died. About how HER mother reminded her regularly that she wished she had fled Eastern Europe with her brother (to young to take the journey) and died in a bomb raid.

So where does it come from? Biogenic? Familial pathology? Both?

Whew.

fb

 

Re: Management Of Borderline Personality » floatingbridge

Posted by Phillipa on June 7, 2011, at 23:18:06

In reply to Re: Management Of Borderline Personality » Phillipa, posted by floatingbridge on June 7, 2011, at 22:55:14

Yes I agree. Lots of studies say that so many young folks and teens fit this but outgrown it? I wonder if it's true? If so then it's a personality disorder of the very young. Oh harder every day to figure out what's going on isn't it?

 

sorry I went off. (nm)

Posted by floatingbridge on June 8, 2011, at 3:22:34

In reply to Management Of Borderline Personality, posted by Phillipa on June 6, 2011, at 21:25:57

 

and double posted, too. Drat my phone :-/

Posted by floatingbridge on June 9, 2011, at 6:50:01

In reply to sorry I went off. (nm), posted by floatingbridge on June 8, 2011, at 3:22:34

Phillipa, that message wasn't directed at you.

sorry. hugs!

fb


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