The temperamental borders of affective disorders
- 1 April 1994
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica
- Vol. 89 (s379) , 32-37
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0447.1994.tb05815.x
Abstract
Depending on the population studied, anywhere from half to two-thirds of DSM-III borderline disorders seem to represent subaffective expressions, principally on the border of bipolar disorder. “Borderland” may actually be a better characterization of this large temperamentally unstable terrain with a population prevalence of 4–6% (as compared with 1% for classical bipolar disorder). The temperaments include the dysthymic, irritable, and cyclothymic types which, respectively, coexist with “double depressive”, mixed bipolar, and bipolar II disorders; others conform to an anxious-sensitive temperament in continuum with hysteroid dysphoric and atypical depressive disorders. Borderline “stable instability” in these patients appears secondary to affective temperamental dysregulation, which has exacerbated into a protracted emotional storm during a difficult maturational phase in the biigraphy of a given patient.Keywords
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