The Neurobiology of Personality Disorders
The Neurobiology of Personality Disorders
PERSONALITY DISORDERS
Overview
Neurologists and primary care doctors manage patients with a wide range of
psychiatric disturbances to include personality disorders. The definition of a
personality disorder encompasses individuals with interpersonal or
psychosocial dysfunction that impairs their social or professional function.
Personality disorders are common in the general population occurring in
1-2% of the adult population; however, these statistics are somewhat
bounded by culture and socioeconomic variables. The patient with
personality disorder may frustrate care, provoke the clinician or consume
large amounts of the practitioner’s time. Comorbid substance abuse is
common in persons with specific types of personality disorder creating the
management problem of drug-seeking behavior, e.g., sociopaths.
Personality is a complex mixture of affect, temperament, cognitive style,
social skills, and impulse control. Personality is a mixture of brain biology
and developmental experiences from childhood and adolescence.
Diagnosis
The diagnosis of personality disorders requires a careful clinical history,
physical and neurological examination, as well as mental status examination.
The diagnosis of personality disorders is based upon a longitudinal history
of dysfunctional interpersonal relationships that cause impairment of
function. This diagnosis requires a carefully detailed history of social,
personal, sexual, and professional behaviors. Personality disorders often
present as intact “normal” individuals. The features that produce
dysfunction, e.g., irritability, impulsivity, antisocial activities etc., often
become apparent to the clinician overtime. The diagnosis of personality
disorder is based on a longitudinal history that is confirmed by other
sources, e.g., family, employer, as many individuals will distort or
misrepresent their history. Many physical and neurological disorders can
produce abnormal behavior and the clinician must exclude all potential
physical causes for the symptoms. A diagnosis of personality disorder
implies the absence of mental illness that would produce identical
symptoms. For example, depressed patients may be apathetic, disinterested,
and unwilling to work; however, this does not indicate some form of
antisocial or avoidant behavior. The diagnosis of personality disorder can
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THE NEUROBIOLOGY OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS
co-exist with mental illness and this feature is apparent after the mental
illness is adequately treated. Psychological testing can sometimes benefit
the clinician and the MMPI has specific quantitative indicators to identify
histrionic narcissistic and antisocial personality features among many. A
skillful psychometric tester can generally predict the kind of personality
features and disorder present. The presence of annoying personality features
does not indicate a disorder and the clinician must demonstrate that the
symptom disrupts the normal life of the individual. Personality disorders
should never be diagnosed on a single interview or in the emergency room.
The diagnosis is best accomplished by either a psychiatrist or a trained
psychologist. Individuals with personality disorders are usually not
psychotic. These persons are legally and socially responsible for decisions
that produce serious life consequences. Although inclined to dysfunctional
or disruptive behavior, these persons are able to comprehend the
consequences of their behavior.
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THE NEUROBIOLOGY OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS
Personality disorders generally occur in younger patients and this condition
emerges in the post-adolescent young adult. Teenagers have not completed
psychosocial development and therefore a permanent disruption of normal
function cannot be confirmed until adulthood. Many behaviors associated
with adult personality disorder resemble common adolescent behaviors, e.g.,
emotional lability, poor impulse control. Personality disorders can also
result from neurological diseases – especially traumatic brain injury. The
symptoms of personality disorders generally persist into late life, although
the intensity of manifestations may be mediated through years of
conditioning and psychosocial education. Individuals with personality
disorders frequently have other psychiatric morbidity, including anxiety or
mood disorders as well as somatoform disorders. The diagnosis of many
personality disorders, e.g., antisocial, borderline, histrionic, etc., carries a
significant negative connotation in the healthcare system, and these
diagnoses should only be affixed by a psychiatrist with detailed longitudinal
knowledge of the individual. Many patients with serious mental illness may
manifest symptoms of personality disorder during an acute psychiatric
illness and these symptoms will improve with correction of the underlying
major mental illness. For example, manic patients may demonstrate some
antisocial behavior that promptly improves with treatment of the mania.
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THE NEUROBIOLOGY OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS
circumstance. Emotional, intellectual, and social insight mirror emotional,
intellectual and social domains inherent to human mental life. Persons with
borderline personality disorders fail to assess their internal emotional
content, while psychopathic individuals fail to demonstrate social insight.
Cluster A
Cluster A includes the schizoid schizotypal and paranoid personality
disorders. These diagnoses are now considered within the schizophrenic
spectrum in which psychosis is not present; however, many odd personality
traits dominate the individual. Schizoid personality tends to be distant, aloof
individuals with impaired spontaneity. Schizotypal individuals tend to
demonstrate peculiar magical thinking without hallucinations. Structural
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THE NEUROBIOLOGY OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS
and functional brain imaging on individuals with Cluster A demonstrate
subtle abnormalities similar to those present in persons with schizophrenia.
Family pedigrees of persons with schizophrenia demonstrate higher rates of
Cluster A symptomology. These individuals also manifest higher rates of
subtle neurological soft signs consistent with the picture seen in persons
with schizophrenia. Patients with Cluster A personality disorders
occasionally benefit from antipsychotic medication. These individuals can
develop psychosis or depression as well as substance abuse. The Cluster A
personality disorder is the most biological determined of the three
personality Clusters.
Cluster B
Cluster B includes narcissistic borderline, histrionic and antisocial
personality disorders and this grouping includes most individuals with
personality disorder. The B Cluster encompasses individuals with difficult
and often disruptive symptoms that can disrupt inpatient units. These
individuals demonstrate high rates of substance abuse producing frequent
calls to request prescriptions – especially controlled substances. Many
individuals with B Cluster symptoms were the victim of childhood physical
or sexual abuse and these individuals often have legal as well as medical
problems. Poor impulse control is a prominent feature of Cluster B
disorders. Impulse control is a complex intellectual function involving
cortical, subcortical, and brain stem regions. Some impulse control
disorders are seen in persons without personality disorders (See Table ____).
Functional and structural brain imaging studies demonstrate dysfunction in
orbito-frontal cortex, cingulated cortex, nucleus accumbers, and amygdala.
Poor impulse control involves poor judgment in measuring the consequences
of decisions and inability to learn from previous experiences. Dopaminergic
GABA-ergic and serotonergic systems are linked to managing impulsive
behavior and moderating the arousal response.
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THE NEUROBIOLOGY OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS
Borderline Personality Disorder
The borderline personality disorder combines emotional lability with poor
impulse control to produce a sometimes volatile patient and accounts for
over half of these diagnoses. Borderline personality disorder includes
lability of affect, intense feelings of loneliness, and boredom, failure to form
normal personal relationships, self-mutilating behaviors such as slashing,
dangerous impulsive behaviors such as sexual promiscuity or substance
abuse, and constant need for psychological support. Borderline personality
disorder patients demonstrate splitting or black and white behavior with
medical treatment teams. Splitting is the creation of conflicts between
segments of the clinical care team with one group or individual pitted
against another by the patient. For example, such individuals will convince
day shift that night shift is mean or inappropriate to the patient. Black and
white behavior involves inflation of the clinician’s worth while the doctor is
perceived as gratifying the patient’s needs with subsequent total rejection
when the clinician fails to meet the patient’s demands. For example, the
patient who informs the doctor that “they are most wonderful physician and
the first individual that understands the patients problem”, followed a week
later when the patient demeans the physician for not showing sufficient
attention or concern, i.e., “you are just like all the rest.” Borderline
personality disorders have high rates of suicide attempts, aggressive
behavior, drug-seeking behavior, promiscuity, or involvement in dangerous
behaviors such as exotic dancing, drug-dealing, etc.
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THE NEUROBIOLOGY OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS
Histrionic Personality Disorder
Persons with histrionic personality disorders will demonstrate flamboyance
of style and lability of affect. These patients may present with dramatic
symptoms and affect. These patients form empty, shallow relationships that
often produce interpersonal disconnection. Substance abuse and mood
disorders are common for these individuals. The neurobiology of histrionic
personality disorders is unknown. Treatment for histrionic personality
disorders include long-term psychotherapy and management of associated
mood disorders or substance abuse.
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THE NEUROBIOLOGY OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS
Antisocial personality disorder is not an excuse for criminal behavior
because the sociopaths understand right from wrong and the criminality of
their actions. Sociopaths do not adhere to norms imposed by society. A
specific gene or biochemical lesion has not been linked to criminal behavior.
Criminality is a complex mixture of genetic or developmental
predispositions coupled with environmental factors.
Cluster C
The Cluster C includes passive, dependent, and obsessive-compulsive
avoidant personality disorders. These poorly characterized individuals use
withdrawal, avoidance, or self-defeating behaviors to manage interpersonal
stress. Structural and functional brain imaging studies are not available for
these individuals and postmortem examinations have not been performed on
these individuals.
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TABLE _____
B Antisocial + -- Psychotherapy
Borderline + -- Combined
Histrionic -- -- Combined
C Avoidant ? -- Psychotherapy
Obsessive-
Compulsiv ? --- Psychotherapy
e
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FACT SHEET ON PERSONALITY DISORDERS
1. Personality disorders are common in the general population (1-2%)
and afflict all racial, ethnic, and gender groups.
2. The diagnosis of personality disorders require detailed knowledge of
the person’s longitudinal history as gathered by an experienced
observer as well as the absence of another serious mental illness.
3. Personality disorders produce mal-adaptive professional, personal and
social behaviors that disrupt the individual’s normal life.
4. Persons with personality disorder frequently manifest failure of
insight and social judgment with no evidence of cognitive deficit or
neurological findings.
5. Personality disorders are divided into three broad clusters: 1) Cluster
A-- symptoms associated with abnormalities of thought, 2) Cluster B
– symptoms associated with abnormalities of emotional modulation,
and 3) Cluster C – symptoms associated with avoidance or
withdrawal.
6. Cluster A disorders include schizoid and schizotypal, which fall
within a spectrum of disorders associated with schizophrenia.
7. Individuals with Cluster B demonstrate problems with modulation of
emotion, e.g., borderline and histrionic personality disorder as well as
modulation of impulse control, e.g., antisocial personality disorder.
8. The Cluster B personality disorder may demonstrate comorbid
substance abuse, drug-seeking behavior, or disruptive behaviors on
the inpatient unit.
9. Cluster B personality disorders may benefit from antidepressants or
anti-impulse medications, e.g., Tegretol, when such symptoms exist;
however, addictive drugs should be carefully monitored when
prescribed for these individuals.
10. Cluster B personality disorders respond best to structured long-term
individual or group psychotherapy.
11.Antisocial personality disorders rarely respond to any form of therapy
and persist into late life.
12.Cluster C disorders are uncommon and require psychotherapy.
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THE NEUROBIOLOGY OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS