Personality
disorders have long been assumed to be purely psychological and could only be
diagnosed with behavior. This is evidenced by how the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders is arranged; it lists out a set of behaviors that is exhaustive
and inclusive to help practitioners identify a psychological issue. Behaviors
can be altered easily; People change their behavior when they are in different
social circles, situations, and even as a job. If the only method of diagnosis
is based on easily manipulated variables, then the validity of the diagnosis is
variable. In addition to the DSM, mental disorders should be diagnosed by
physical characteristics in the brain.
The article, Mind, Brain, and Personality
Disorders describes mentalization as the ability to perceive others
emotion. “A caregiver who ascribes mental states to the child, treats the child
as a mental agent, and helps the child to create internal working models” (pg.
651). It explains that some children who have suffered from abuse cannot
perceive others’ emotions as well because mentalization is a skill we learn
through socialization. It implies that we learned how to smile when we are
happy and frown when we feel anger but that is inaccurate because facial
expressions are the same in all cultures. An article titled Universal Facial
Expression of Emotion, concluded that facial expression is universal but
the reaction to the stimuli to evoke certain facial expressions differs between
cultures. Since the behavior is indistinguishable across cultures, it is a
natural phenomenon and genetic. If a child needs to be taught how to process facial
expressions, there is a defective gene which caused a defective brain.
In 2007 a
study on the frontal lobe of patients with borderline personality disorder
showed that there was a physical difference in their brains. The size of the
left orbitofrontal cortex and right anterior cingulate cortex was reduced. The
right anterior cingulate cortex is associated with empathy, emotions, impulse
control, and decision making and the left orbitofrontal cortex is associated
with decision making and reward systems. The symptoms of borderline personality
disorder include extreme emotional mood swings, impulsiveness, and poor
decision making which are linked with the observable decrease in brain size in
the areas mentioned above. Lower fractional anisotropy, a word to describe when
osmosis is less restricted in all directions in the brain, which is associated
with impulsiveness in schizophrenics is also observed in those with BPD
Autism, a disorder
with similar symptoms to BPD is explained as being “characterized by complete
absence of mentalization on a neurological basis” also has the same physical
representation such as a decrease in volume of the right anterior cingulate
cortex
Autism is
often undiagnosed in females. Because diagnoses of psychological issues are not
performed with MRI machines, but determined by how people act, it is up to the
sufferers to communicate there is something wrong by diverging from appropriate
behavior. The problem arises when the disorder is present, but the symptoms are
not. Autistic females do not deviate from acceptable behavior in ways other
than communication impairment
Coincidentally, borderline personality
disorder is diagnosed in girls more than boys. It has been suggested that
clinicians hold a female bias when diagnosing because the most known symptoms
are more likely to be expressed in women. Another reason is differential
justice, certain groups receive different consequences for the same behavior.
For example, a woman self-destructive behavior may take drugs and end up in a
mental hospital but a man with the same behavior will end up in prison and not
get the treatment he needs
Not only
are the brains of those diagnosed with autism and borderline personality
disorder similar, the symptoms are as well. A study showed that 42 out of 62
women with autism could be diagnosed with a personality disorder based on the
criteria in the DSM-IV. With that much overlap it is reasonable to assume that
many autistic women are misdiagnosed with BPD and many men with BPD are
misdiagnosed with autism. There are limitations to diagnosing psychological
disorders through behavior only because how people react to illness and how
they perceive their disorders differ, so the symptoms differ. It is imperative
that psychologist recognize autism and BPD as a brain defect and make a
standard model for a brain with those disorders. BPD and autism cannot
effectively be diagnosed by how the patients act, it needs to be identified by
what the brain looks like
References
Anna Cook, J. O. (2018). Friendship motivations,
challenges and the role of Masking for Girls. European Journal of Special
Needs Education, 302-315.
Ekman, P. (1970). Universal Facial Expressions of
Emotion. California Mental Health Research Digest, 151-158.
Frazier, D. T. (2014). Behavioral and Cognitive
Characteristics of Females and Males. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry,
329-340.
Gabbard, G. O. (2005). Mind, Brain, and Personality
Disorders. Am J Psychiatry, 648-655.
Jon E. Grant, J. M. (2007). Frontal White Matter. The
Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical, 383–390.
M. Mehmet Haznedar, M. M. (1997). ANTERIOR CINGULATE
GYRUS VOLUME. Am J Psychiatry, 1047-1050.
Randy A. Sansone, E. a. (2011). Gender Patterns in
Borderline Personality Disorder. Innovations in CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCE,
16-20.
Robert B. Dudas, E. A. (2017). The overlap between
autistic spectrum conditions and borderline personality disorder. PLoS ONE,
1-13.
Your post was very interesting! I've learned a great deal reading it and it is very interesting to read the potential connexion between BPD and autism as well as the disparity between boys and girls. As you've said in your journal, we cannot diagnose autism or BPD by IRM but by the way people act. More study is definitely needed to identify more effectively these mental disorder.
ReplyDelete