Comorbidity between bipolar disorder and cluster B personality disorders as indicator of affective dysregulation and clinical severity

Authors

  • Sergio Apfelbaum Casa de Familia Córdoba, Argentina
  • Pilar Regalado Fundación Foro para la Salud Mental Buenos Aires, Argentina
  • Laura Herman Casa de Familia Córdoba, Argentina
  • Julia Teitelbaum Fundación Foro para la Salud Mental Buenos Aires, Argentina
  • Pablo Gagliesi Fundación Foro para la Salud Mental Buenos Aires, Argentina

Keywords:

Bipolarity,, Affective disorders,, Cluster B personality disorders,, Borderline personality,, Comorbidity in bipolarity

Abstract

Introduction: Several lines of evidence have well established a relationship between Bipolar Disorder and Cluster B Personality Disorders. The study compares mood spectrum and temperamental symptoms, personality traits and clinical characteristics among outpatients (n = 63) diagnosed with major depression (MD), bipolar disorder (BD), cluster B personality disorders (PD-B) and comorbidity of BD + PD-B.

Method: The diagnosis was determined with structured interviews (MINI and SCID II) and symptom assessments with evaluation and diagnostic instruments (MOODS-SR, BI, TEMPS-A and IPDE). Differences between groups were explored with post hoc analysis and analysis of variance.

Results: Patients with BD+PD-B comorbidity presented an earlier onset and more severity in suicide attempts, hospitalizations and self-harm behaviors. They showed more characteristics of cyclothymic and irritable temperament and more cluster A and B personality traits, than patients with BD only. PD-B patients obtained intermediate scores in manic like symptoms: higher than patients with depression and lower than patients with bipolar disorder. However, the Bipolarity Index clearly distinguished patients with BD or with comorbidity (BD+PD-B) from the other diagnostic groups (PD-B and MD).

Conclusions: BD+PD-B comorbidity presents a more severe type of emotional dysregulation compared to the other diagnostic groups, including BD and PD-B alone.

Assessing temperament, personality traits, emotional dysregulation in mania and depression, self-harm and hospitalizations severity and age onset could facilitate differential diagnosis and enhance effectiveness of treatments for BD, PD-B and their comorbidity.

Published

2013-09-01

How to Cite

Apfelbaum, Sergio, et al. “Comorbidity Between Bipolar Disorder and Cluster B Personality Disorders As Indicator of Affective Dysregulation and Clinical Severity”. Actas Españolas De Psiquiatría, vol. 41, no. 5, Sept. 2013, pp. 269-78, https://actaspsiquiatria.es/index.php/actas/article/view/649.

Issue

Section

Original