McGlashan Thomas H, Grilo Carlos M, Sanislow Charles A, Ralevski Elizabeth, Morey Leslie C, Gunderson John G, Skodol Andrew E, Shea M Tracie, Zanarini Mary C, Bender Donna, Stout Robert L, Yen Shirley, Pagano Maria
Collaborative Longitudinal Personality Disorder Study, Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA.
Am J Psychiatry. 2005 May;162(5):883-9. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.162.5.883.
This study tracked the individual criteria of four DSM-IV personality disorders-borderline, schizotypal, avoidant, and obsessive-compulsive personality disorders-and how they change over 2 years.
This clinical sample of patients with personality disorders was derived from the Collaborative Longitudinal Personality Disorders Study and included all participants with borderline, schizotypal, avoidant, or obsessive-compulsive personality disorder for whom complete 24-month blind follow-up assessments were obtained (N=474). The authors identified and rank-ordered criteria for each of the four personality disorders by their variation in prevalence and changeability (remission) over time.
The most prevalent and least changeable criteria over 2 years were paranoid ideation and unusual experiences for schizotypal personality disorder, affective instability and anger for borderline personality disorder, feeling inadequate and feeling socially inept for avoidant personality disorder, and rigidity and problems delegating for obsessive-compulsive personality disorder. The least prevalent and most changeable criteria were odd behavior and constricted affect for schizotypal personality disorder, self-injury and behaviors defending against abandonment for borderline personality disorder, avoiding jobs that are interpersonal and avoiding potentially embarrassing situations for avoidant personality disorder, and miserly behaviors and strict moral behaviors for obsessive-compulsive personality disorder.
These patterns highlight that within personality disorders the relatively fixed criteria are more trait-like and attitudinal, whereas the relatively intermittent criteria are more behavioral and reactive. These patterns suggest that personality disorders are hybrids of traits and symptomatic behaviors and that the interaction of these elements over time helps determine diagnostic stability. These patterns may also inform criterion selection for DSM-V.
本研究追踪了四种《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV)人格障碍——边缘型、分裂型、回避型和强迫型人格障碍——的个体标准,以及它们在两年内的变化情况。
该人格障碍患者的临床样本来自协作性纵向人格障碍研究,包括所有患有边缘型、分裂型、回避型或强迫型人格障碍且获得了完整的24个月盲法随访评估的参与者(N = 474)。作者根据四种人格障碍各自标准的患病率变化和随时间的可变性(缓解情况)进行识别并排序。
在两年中,分裂型人格障碍最普遍且最不易变化的标准是偏执观念和异常体验,边缘型人格障碍是情感不稳定和愤怒,回避型人格障碍是感到能力不足和社交笨拙,强迫型人格障碍是僵化和难以分配任务。最不普遍且最易变化的标准分别是:分裂型人格障碍的怪异行为和情感受限,边缘型人格障碍的自我伤害和防御被抛弃行为,回避型人格障碍的避免人际性工作和避免潜在尴尬情境,强迫型人格障碍的吝啬行为和严格道德行为。
这些模式突出表明,在人格障碍中,相对固定的标准更具特质性和态度性,而相对间歇性的标准更具行为性和反应性。这些模式表明人格障碍是特质与症状行为的混合体,并且这些要素随时间的相互作用有助于确定诊断稳定性。这些模式也可能为《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第五版(DSM-V)的标准选择提供参考。