The specific symptoms, or “traits,” of personality disorders include thinking, feeling, and behaving that deviates from the expectations of the culture.

Once viewed solely in moral terms, personality differences are now better understood as adaptations to genetic and environmental influences in childhood. Research has revealed that certain factors affect personality development in measurable and predictable ways. Not only do mental health professionals now know that pathological personality styles typically develop in response to trauma or neglect, but they also have learned that these painful disorders can besuccessfully treated.

What Are Personality Disorders?

What is a personality disorder? It is a condition that arises in a chaotic environment that becomes maladaptive outside of that environment. The American Psychiatric Associationdefinesa personality disorder as “a way of thinking, feeling, and behaving that deviates from the expectations of the culture, causes distress or problems functioning, and lasts over time.”

What characteristics are typical of personality disorders? The specific symptoms, or “traits,” of personality disorders, vary significantly but are all stable over time and generally inflexible. They also directly reflect childhood circumstances. For example, someone with an anxious temperament and demanding parents might develop a rigid and fearful way of relating to the world that later becomes avoidant personality disorder.

Like the DSM-IV, the DSM-V categorizes personality disorders into three clusters. Each of the three clusters of personality disorders includes three to four disorders that differ in details but share broad traits.

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Types of Personality Disorders

What are the different types of personality disorders? Traditionally, Cluster A personality disorders arecategorizedas odd or eccentric, Cluster B personality disorders as dramatic and Cluster C personality disorders as anxiety-driven. These personality disorder types are deeply ingrained and typically established by late adolescence or early adulthood.

Cluster A Personality Disorders

The Cluster A disorders are considered by many to bethe most severe groupof personality disorders. They all share characteristics in common with schizophrenia, which was once defined in the DSM as a similar condition. However, none feature the hallucinations of that disorder and all are defined by various types of delusional thinking that are not characteristic of schizophrenia.

Paranoid Personality Disorder

According to the DSM, people withparanoid personality disorderexhibit “a pervasive distrust and suspiciousness of others such that their motives are interpreted as malevolent” as exhibited by four or more of the following symptoms:

While paranoid personality disorder is not defined by the significant social withdrawal of the other two Cluster A personality disorders, it makes it difficult for people to maintain long-term relationships, especially intimate relationships.

Related Topic:Treatment for paranoid personality disorder

Schizoid Personality Disorder

Schizoid personality disorderis diagnosed when someone exhibits four or more of these specific symptoms of restricted emotional range and social withdrawal:

This disorder is distinguished from introversion or social anxiety by a lack of expressed emotion, whether positive or negative, in reaction to social isolation.

Schizotypal Personality Disorder

Like people with schizoid personality disorder, people withschizotypal personality disorderare socially avoidant. They exhibit additional features of eccentric behavior and distorted cognition, as defined by four or more of the following traits:

The delusions associated with schizoid personality disorder tend not to be as elaborate as those associated with schizophrenia and are not necessarily paranoid in nature.

Cluster B Personality Disorders

The Cluster B personality disorders are associated with dramatic, impulsive and emotionally dysregulated behavior. These personality disorders all reflect shared traits ofdisinhibition and negative temperament or neuroticism. People with these personality disorders are risk-prone and more susceptible toself-harmandsubstance abusethan the general population.

Antisocial Personality Disorder

The DSM definesantisocial personality disorderas “a pervasive pattern of disregard for and violation of the rights of others” as demonstrated by three or more of the following symptoms:

To receive a diagnosis of antisocial personality disorder, a person must be at least 18 years old, have shown some evidence of conduct disorder before the age of 15, and must not experience these traits solely in the course of schizophrenia or a manic episode. People with this disorder typically have a history of involvement with the criminal justice system.

Borderline Personality Disorder

Borderline personality disorder(BPD) is a disorder of emotional regulation that also affects a person’s sense of identity and interpersonal relationships. To be diagnosed with BPD, a person must exhibit five or more of the following traits:

While some people with BPD are more extroverted and prone to self-destructive behavior, others keep their emotional intensity largely hidden. In general, people with the disorder are the most reactive in response to real or perceived rejection or abandonment.

Histrionic Personality Disorder

Histrionic personality disorderalso affects emotional regulation but is primarily defined by a pattern of attention seeking as exhibited by five or more of the following:

While people with a healthy degree of extraversion also like attention, they are not as dependent on it or as reactive to its absence as individuals with histrionic personality disorder.

Related Topic:Histrionic personality disorder treatment

Narcissistic Personality Disorder

Narcissistic personality disorderdevelops in response to a lack of empathic responses from parents or other authority figures in childhood. It is defined by five or more of the following symptoms of diminished empathy and grandiosity:

People with narcissistic personality disorder often keep vulnerable emotional reactions hidden from others and even from themselves. As a result, they can come across as cold or aloof when they are neither. Like people with antisocial personality disorder, they are prone to exploiting others but are driven by a desire for social status and admiration rather than power.

Cluster C Personality Disorders

Just as the Cluster A personality disorders all share characteristics with schizophrenia, Cluster C personality disorders all share characteristics with anxiety disorders like social anxiety disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder.

What distinguishes anxiety disorders from the personality disorders related to them is a matter of debate. However, in general, personality disorders are considered to be more deeply internalized and pervasive, as well as more difficult (though not impossible) to treat.

Avoidant Personality Disorder

People with avoidant personality disorder avoid social situations not because they prefer solitude but because they fear judgment and rejection. People are diagnosed with this disorder when they exhibit four or more of the following symptoms:

While the symptoms are similar, avoidant personality disorder is distinguished from social anxiety disorder by the extent to which negative self-evaluation and avoidance are integrated into a person’s identity and fundamental sense of self.

Related Topic:Avoidant personality disorder treatment

Dependent Personality Disorder

Dependent personality disorderis defined by the DSM as “a pervasive and excessive need to be taken care of that leads to submissive and clinging behavior and fears of separation, beginning by early adulthood and present in a variety of contexts,” as demonstrated by five or more of the following:

There are no qualifiers for a diagnosis of dependent personality disorder other than meeting five or more of the above criteria as an adult.

Obsessive Compulsive Personality Disorder

When people haveobsessive-compulsive personality disorder (OCPD), they are driven by a need for perfectionism, order and control as exhibited by four or more of the following:

Unlike people withobsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), people with OCPD rarely recognize their obsessions and compulsions as irrational. They are less likely to engage in the repetitive compulsions typical of OCD and more likely to exhibit a generally rigid approach across a wide variety of life situations.

Related Topic:Obsessive compulsive personality disorder treatment

Causes and Symptoms of Personality Disorders

What are the symptoms of personality disorders? While specific traits vary across disorders, shared characteristics include a lack of trust in others and a distorted sense of self.

Most personality disorder symptoms develop by early adulthood. This is because what causes personality disorders is a combination of factors rooted in childhood experiences, including early trauma, natural temperament and environmental factors.

The symptoms of personality disorders vary, but there are some general signs that a person has a personality disorder. The most significant is that the way they relate to the world does not change according to circumstances. This is part of what distinguishes a personality disorder. A person experiences these qualities as traits, not symptoms of a transient, circumstance-specific condition.

Distrust of Others

Mistrust of others is to some extent a component of all personality disorders. A person with paranoid personality disorder is overtly suspicious of everyone’s motives, while people with borderline or dependent personality disorders may find it difficult to trust the legitimacy of their relationships with others. People with obsessive-compulsive personality disorder don’t trust that others can help them, while people with avoidant personality disorder don’t trust that others will like or accept them.

The reason for this nearly universal element of mistrust lies in the origin of personality disorders. They develop when a child cannot trust their parents, other authority figures or general circumstances. These rigid personality styles reflect different ways of trying to establish a sense of order and security in a world that lacks these qualities.

Paranoia

Paranoia is another common personality disorder symptom. It is especially prominent in Cluster A personality disorders, in which people prescribe motives to actions where none exist. Paranoia is present in subtler ways in Cluster C disorders, especially avoidant personality disorder. People with these anxious personality styles fear being judged and rejected by others, as do people with borderline personality disorder.

The origin of this shared trait is that people with personality disorders often had experiences in which others had harmful intentions toward them as children, which they then project onto others in a generalized way as adults. Their childhoods taught them not to trust other people.

Distorted Perception of Reality

Each personality disorder can be understood as a different way of seeing the world through a distorted lens. People with Cluster C disorders mistrust their own or others’ ability to handle everyday events and interactions. People with Cluster B disorders misapprehend the way others see them and are prone to grandiosity, whether projected onto the self or others.

People with Cluster A disorders experience the most profoundly distorted perceptions of reality, especially those with paranoid personality disorder or schizotypal personality disorder. Both of these disorders involve some degree of delusional thinking. In each, people read intentions and meanings into actions and events that are not actually there.

People with paranoid personality disorder misread hostile motives into neutral or friendly actions. People with schizotypal personality disorder misread random coincidences as meaningful communications or signals, and often have idiosyncratic superstitions rooted in such beliefs. For example, they might believe that a television announcer is speaking directly to them and that they need to respond by tapping back on the television screen.

Blurred Senses of Identity

All personality disorders reflect a disturbance of the sense of self, but none feature a more potent disturbance of identity than the Cluster B disorders. The thread linking these disorders is the fear of a lost or absent sense of self. While people universally enjoy approval and validation, people with Cluster B disorders need affirmation to feel like they have a self at all.

The self-denial of a person with BPD has a similar origin as the self-affectation of someone with narcissistic personality disorder, which is an emptiness felt at the core of the self. People with these disorders look to interactions with others to fill that emptiness.

Where people with BPD yearn for love to affirm their existence, people with narcissistic personality disorder yearn for admiration. People with histrionic personality disorder seek attention, while people with antisocial personality disorder seek to experience a feeling of power over others.

Depression, Personality Disorders and Suicidal Thoughts

Research shows that people with any personality disorder in adolescence are more likely to develop depression as adults and that bothCluster CandCluster Bdisorders are associated with a higher risk of suicidal thoughts and actions.

People with borderline personality disorder are particularly prone to self-harm and suicidal gestures and have a heightened risk of suicide. Their capacity to experience extremely intense emotions and to feel existentially threatened can turn deadly when combined with their impulsivity and inclination toward self-harm.

People with Cluster B personality disorders are generally more prone to act on impulses, including self-destructive ones. This makes them more likely to act on passing suicidal thoughts than others. People with Cluster C personality disorders are prone to overwhelming feelings of shame, which can be intense enough to drive them to suicide when their social circumstances seem helpless.

How Are Personality Disorders Diagnosed?

Like anymental health condition, personality disorders are primarily diagnosed through clinical interviews. Mental health professionals use the DSM as a guide, determining whether a person meets the full clinical criteria for a diagnosis through a series of targeted questions.

Diagnosing personality disorders can be tricky for a number of reasons, including their initial resemblance to other diagnoses. The consistency of a set of symptoms over time and across a variety of situations can help clarify that a person has a personality disorder.

Often, these disorders only reveal themselves after other diagnoses are attempted that do not match the symptoms that someone experiences. For example, people with Cluster A personality traits might initially give a clinician the impression that they have schizophrenia until the absence of hallucinations becomes apparent. People with BPD are often misdiagnosed with bipolar disorder due to their instability of mood. People with avoidant personality disorder might be diagnosed with social anxiety disorder until a clinician finds that they aren’t responding to normal interventions.

It takes clinical observation over a long period of time to accurately diagnose someone with a personality disorder. It is also a careful process. Mental health professionals often hesitate to formally diagnose people with personality disorders due to the stigma associated with them.

Risk Factors for Personality Disorders

Several factors put people at a greater risk of developing a personality disorder. These include:

Overall, while personality disorders have a genetic component, they are much more likely to develop when people grow up in chaotic or abusive homes.

Personality Disorder Statistics

Personality disorder statistics show that they are relatively common and carry significant associated risks:

If you struggle with a personality disorder and co-occurring addiction, help is closer than you think. With the right treatment, recovery is possible.Reach outto a representative at The Recovery Village today to take the first step toward a better life.