Diagnosis of BPD in DSM-IV as an Axis II Disorder
Borderline personality disorder (BPD) and other personality disorders are typically diagnosed using the official guidebook for the diagnosis of psychiatric disorders, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (currently in its fifth edition, the DSM-5). The last DSM, DSM-IV-TR, used a “multi-axial” diagnostic system. This means that when a diagnosis was made, attention was paid to five different areas, or axes, that could affect the individual who was being diagnosed. Axis I was for the diagnosis of clinical disorders, the conditions that people most often think of when they think of psychiatric disorders. For example, major depressive disorder or post-traumatic stress disorder would have been diagnosed on Axis I. Axis II was reserved for long-standing conditions of clinical significance, like personality disorders and mental retardation. These disorders typically last for years, are present before adulthood, and have a significant impact on functioning.
The Rationale for Putting Personality Disorders on Axis II
In theory, personality disorders were relegated to Axis II because this was a way to make sure that they did not get overlooked. If a person had multiple clinical disorders on Axis I, coding the personality disorders on Axis II helped make the contribution of the personality disorder stand out. Another reason that experts decided to put personality disorders on Axis II in DSM-IV relates to the course of these disorders. Whereas the Axis I disorders tend to be episodic, meaning they are on-again, off-again, personality disorders are thought of as chronic, meaning they occur over years.
Diagnosis of BPD in DSM-5
DSM-5 did away with the axis system, relegating everything to one axis to ostensibly make diagnosing easier, as well as removing what was thought to be an artificial distinction among conditions. However, diagnosing, assessing, and treating personality disorders are basically the same as in DSM-IV, including the symptoms that need to be present in order to diagnose BPD.
Symptoms of Borderline Personality Disorder
The hallmark BPD is a pervasive pattern instability in relationships, self-image, and moods.. To be diagnosed with borderline personality disorder, you must have at least five of the following symptoms:
Anger problems, including difficulty controlling anger, intense anger that may not fit the situation and/or angry outburstsA distorted and insecure concept of yourself that affects everything in your life, from relationships to goals to moods and opinions.An irrational fear of being abandoned that causes powerful emotions and going to extremes to make sure you aren’t abandoned.A pattern of turbulent and unstable relationships with friends and family.Feeling constantly bored and/or empty.Impulsive choices and behaviors that may result in risky behavior, such as gambling, shopping sprees, or engaging in unprotected sex with multiple partners.Paranoid thoughts or dissociative feelings, as if you are not a part of your own life or you’re out of your body, that can emerge under stress. Powerful, changeable emotions and moods that may last from a few hours to a few days.Suicidal and/or self-harming behavior, like cutting.
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