Persoonlijkheidsproblematiek - een samenvatting
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Personality disorders
Chapter 1
Description of personality disorders
Personality is the individual differences in usual tendencies to think, feel and behave. Abnormal personality or pathology refers to maladaptive traits that are overly rigid and/or extreme. Constellations of such pathologically amplified personality traits may constitute personality disorders.
A personality disorder is a chronic psychiatric disorder with onset in adolescence continuing into adulthood, characterized by pathological personality traits that lead to a disruption in the development and maintenance of mutual interpersonal relationships. This is to an extent that leads to prolonged subjective distress of self and/or others.
Personality disorders concern how people matured into adult personalities, and the building blocks are often referred to as traits. Associated problems don’t typically fall into circumscribed specific categories. They involve personal identity and dissatisfaction and dysfunction in interpersonal relationships. It is about difficulties related to how people typically experience and respond to themselves, others, and the world around them (ego-syntonic pathology).
The hallmark of personality disorders is disturbed relationships.
The DSM defines personality disorder as an enduring pattern of inner experience and behaviour that deviates markedly from the expectations of the individual’s culture. This pattern is manifested in two or more of the following areas: cognition, affectivity, interpersonal functioning and impulse control. This is inflexible and pervasive across a broad range of personal and social situations and present for a long duration.
Personality disorder is a longstanding, pervasive and persistent pattern of experience and behaviour. This is different from cultural expectation and problematic in terms of personal suffering and/or impairment in functioning.
Most patients manifest personality pathology that is a combination or mix of the various personality disorders identified in the DSM.
Cluser A
Cluster A consists of: paranoid, schizoid and schizotypical disorders.
This is the odd or eccentric cluster.
Paranoid personality disorder
The criteria are variations of profound mistrust and suspiciousness regarding the motives of other persons. Patients are hypervigilant to hidden meanings and threats, but in a contentious hostile way.
DSM-IV criteria:
Schizoid personality disorder
Patients with schizoid personality disorder tend to lead a withdrawn, isolated life. They are quietly distant, and prefer to be on their own, with minimal needs for relatedness. Typically, they tend to be somewhat low in energy and their emotional life is rather flat.
DSM-IV criteria:
Schizotypal personality disorder
Persons with schizotypal personality disorder hold unusual beliefs. What has no meaning to most persons may have very special meaning to an individual with schizotypal personality disorder.
DSM-IV criteria:
Cluster B
Cluster B contains: antisocial, borderline, histrionic and narcissistic personality disorder.
This is the emotional or dramatic cluster.
Antisocial personality disorder
Patients with antisocial personality disorder tend to disregard the rights of others and are prone to unethical behaviour. They tend to be irresponsible, and do not learn from previous mistakes.
DSM-IV criteria
Borderline personality disorder
Central to borderline is a pervasive pattern of instability across multiple domains, including affect, interpersonal relationships, and self-image.
DSM-IV criteria
Histrionic personality disorder
A key feature of persons with histrionic personality disorder is the lability and shallowness of their affect. They seek to be the centre of attention, and are unhappy when they are not.
DSM-IV criteria
Narcissistic personality disorder
People with narcissistic personality disorder are characterized by their self-centredness and preoccupation with success, achievement, and greatness. They believe they deserve special attention and privileges and have little empathy for others.
DSM-IV criteria
Cluster C
Cluster C includes: avoidant, dependent and obsessive-compulsive personality disorders. This is the anxious cluster.
Avoidant personality disorder
Patients with avoidant personality disorder are sensitive to criticism, disapproval, and ejection. They tend to avoid interpersonal contact. Their mood is generally anxious.
DSM-IV criteria
Dependent personality disorder
Patients with dependent personality disorder have excessive needs for guidance, reassurance, and assistance. They tend to feel incompetent.
DSM-IV criteira
Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder
Patients with obsessive-compulsive personality disorder have as most prominent feature behavioural discipline, a counterproductive preoccupation with details, and deep-felt obedience to rules and regulations.
DSM-IV criteria
Personality disorder not otherwise specified
This label should be assigned when the patient meets the general criteria for a personality disorder and this does not reach the threshold for any personality disorder in particular.
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Dit is een bundel met samenvattingen van artikelen en boeken over persoonlijkheidsproblematiek. De samenvattingen reiken van e verklaringsmodellen tot (mogelijke) behandeling. In deze bundel staat alles wat nodig is voor het vak Persoonlijkheidsproblematiek in het derde jaar
...Personality disorders are pervasive, persistent and pathological personality structures. In this bundle, information is given about each of the ten personality disorders.
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