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Home » Personality Disorders

Psychiatric Times. Vol. 26 No. 7
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Borderline Personality Disorder and Bipolar Disorder—Distinguishing Features of Clinical Diagnosis and Treatment

By Marianne Goodman, MD, Jae Yeon Jeong, PhD, and Joseph Triebwasser, MD | July 13, 2009
Dr Goodman is associate clinical professor at Mount Sinai School of Medicine and medical director of the mental health outpatient department at the James J. Peters VA Medical Center in the Bronx; Dr Jeong is a research fellow at the James J. Peters VA Medical Center; and Dr Triebwasser is an attending physician at the James J. Peters VA Medical Center. The authors report no conflicts of interest concerning the subject matter of this article.

 

Acknowledgment—This work was supported by a Veterans Administration Advanced Career Devel­op­ment Award to Dr Goodman.

Mood episodes
While both disorders cause mood instability and affective reactivity, the phenomenologies of the mood episodes differ. In BPD, mood swings, usually of negative affect, are triggered by interpersonal stressors or perceived stressors, are transient, last from minutes to hours, and are highly dependent on the environment. In bipolar disorder, mood swings are more spontaneous and of longer duration, especially for bipolar I disorder, and there are more extended periods of elation. In addition, in bipolar disorder, acute episodes and symptom-free intervals occur, while in BPD, the affective instability is part of a characteristic pattern of emotional responding. Data suggest that these affective problems persist throughout the life course of the disorder and may be identified by par­ents of children with BPD as early as infancy.20,21

The mood swings of BPD and bipolar II disorder differ in emotion type as well. Individuals with BPD swing from euthymia to anger, and euthymia is infrequent, while bipolar II disorder affective shifts are from euthymia to elation.22 Shifts triggered by interpersonal stressors in BPD, which often involve rejection or perceived abandonment, are less prevalent in bipolar disorder.23 The differentiation of BPD and rapid cycling bipolar disorder remains problematic, as both disorders involve a high degree of affective instability, and the 2 entities are likely to have significant biological and possibly genetic overlap.24 Findings from these 3 studies suggest that careful detailing of the duration of mood episodes, qualitative emotional shifts, recurrent triggering events, and longitudinal patterns (episodic vs lasting) can help distinguish between BPD and bipolar disorder, although not rapid cycling forms of bipolar disorder.22-24

Impulsivity
Impulsivity is behavior that occurs without reflection, is inconsistent with context, and is seen in both BPD and bipolar disorder.25 Differential patterns of impulsivity have been characterized for the depressive and manic phases of bipolar disorder with motor impulsivity (tendency to act on the spur of the moment) specific to mania and non-planning impulsivity (lack of sense of the future) specific to depression. Impulsivity in BPD is also characterized as non-planning.26-28 These data support the premise that BPD may have more symptomatic overlap with the depressive pole of bipolar disorder than with the manic pole.

Similarly, BPD was distinguished from bipolar II disorder by the presence of hostility and differing patterns of impulsivity. Bipolar II disorder showed attentional impulsivity characterized by distractibility and inability to focus on a task, and BPD displayed non-planning impulsiveness. The highest rate of impulsivity was found in populations with comorbid BPD and bipolar II disorder, which suggests that this group may be at the highest risk for self-damaging behaviors.28 This finding argues for the need to make both diagnoses when appropriate.

Clinically, impulsivity is believed to be more episodic in bipolar disorder than in BPD, although inter-episode impulsivity is seen in bipolar disorder when comorbid substance abuse complicates the clinical picture.29 Impulsive acts such as suicidal behavior occur in both disorders, but in bipolar disorder these are predominantly found in the depressive phase, particularly in mixed depressive presentations, and they are related to hopelessness while in BPD, they are often a function of the inability to tolerate distress.30-32

Longitudinal course
Long-term outcome studies in bipolar disorder and BPD seem to challenge the traditional Axis I/Axis II dichotomy, in which mood disorders are widely thought of as episodic and treatable, whereas personality disorders are considered life-long and treatment refractory. Many cases of bipolar disorder assume a chronic course, with long-term morbidity and substantial inter-episode symptomatology, whereas multiyear follow-up studies of patients with BPD have found that most people eventually stop meeting threshold criteria for the disorder.5,33,34 However, there appears to be a core subset of BPD symptoms, especially in the affective and interpersonal realms, that persist even after the more dramatic impulsive or demanding behaviors have subsided. There also appears to be a subset of remission-resistant BPD patients who continue to show poor judgment and high treatment utilization.35,36

Findings from prospective studies on the interactive effects of both disorders indicate that comorbid bipolar disorder had no effect on the clinical course of BPD with respect to functional outcome, remission rates, or number of hospitalizations or other treatment utilization except for mood-stabilizer medication.9

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by Manuel Mota-Castillo | September 05, 2010 1:15 AM EDT

   I wish Secretary Eric Shinseki, head of the Department of Veterans Affairs would read this comment but that will be close to impossible. I say so because for a long time I have been trying to capture the attention of the VA system to an angle of the problem discussed by doctors Goodman, Jeong and Triebwasser.

   As a matter of fact, my stance is the complete opposite of the view postulated in their paper, in more than one way. As Dr. Hagop Akiskal (1) and several others have argued, individuals labeled as "borderline"are bipolar patients on antidepressants. The authors see a beneficial effect of SSRIs on the irritability of "borderline" patients whereas my data shows that over a period of 3 years 100% of the bipolar patients arriving to the ER with suicidal attempts (in a general hospital) were taking antidepressants.(2) Several of them were veterans with many years of treatment at several medical centers and clinics.

    The use of SSRIs in the VA is more prevalent than in other setting because these medications are considered the first line of pharmacological treatment of PTSD. Unfortunately, many traumatized patients also have bipolar spectrum disorders and they never achieve acceptable levels of stability while on antidepressants.

    Another compounding factor is substance abuse. Many veterans use alcohol, opiates and cannabis as tools of last resort to catch some sleep because the racings thoughts (exacerbated by antidepressants, nicotine and caffeine) drive them "crazy" at bed time. The VA expends vast amount of money in substance abuse treatments during which providers, either keep patient on antidepressants or expect they are going to stay "clean and sober" after a 30-days program, while the "sleep aid" is an anti-histaminic drug.

    I started with a reference to General Shinseki because he strikes me as a sensitive and honest person, who would be distraught with the realization of the pain, loss in productivity and family suffering many veterans experience because of the myth of Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) and the obfuscation with the treatment of bipolar disorder.

    Dr. Gunderson deserved all the respect and admiration his brilliant career has earned but the veneration of an illustrious professor should not preclude the realization that numbers and tragic case reports do not lie. The Korean War veteran that was found by his wife with a construction block tied up to his neck and facing the bottom of his swimming pool had been released from a well-known teaching hospital a few weeks before his death.  He also had been labeled "borderline" and bipolar and had a combination of 2 antidepressants and 3 mood stabilizers…so many medications and still he couldn't find a reason to be alive.  Shouldn't this case be a wakeup call to re-think our approach to treatment of bipolar spectrum disorders and a revision of the validity of the so-called Borderline Personality Disorder?

    The psychoanalytic establishment made great contribution to the advance of psychiatrist but they are also responsible for the birth of faulty diagnoses such as Oppositional-Defiant Disorder (ODD) and Conduct Disorder (CD). These two labels were incorporated into the psychiatric nomenclature because the psychoanalysts decided that children could not develop depression or "manic-depressive" illness.  Consequently, the evaluators of youths exhibiting mood swings, unprovoked aggression, and defiance of authority had to put a name to those behaviors. Ironically, in medicine we don't consider abdominal pain a disease but when it comes to psychiatry the symptoms of "defiant and oppositional" become an entity with its own merits.

   Wouldn't be a noble gesture if the psychoanalysts use their influence to dismantle those pseudo diagnoses that DSM-IV-TR calls ODD, CD and BPD?

 

Manuel Mota-Castillo, M.D.

Lake Mary, Florida       

References:

1-     Akiskal, H.S.; Demystifying borderline personality: critique of the concept and
unorthodox reflections on its natural kinship with the bipolar spectrum, Acta Psychiatr. Scand.
110 (2004), pp. 401-407. 2004

2-     Mota-Castillo, M., Bipolar Disorder and the Case Against Antidepressants, Psychiatric Times, "From Our Readers", October 2008.

 

by Yvonne Barash | January 22, 2012 5:17 PM EST

Dr. Motta-Castillo's comment is interesting, does he propose subsuming borderline personality disorder under the rubric of bipolar disorder, or are they two distinct entities?

by The Editors | February 02, 2012 12:38 PM EST

The following comment is by Manuel Mota-Castillo, MD:

I welcome the question posted by Ms. Barash because this issue deserves more attention that what traditionally has received from psychiatric establishment. It is my impression that most colleagues have decided that the current knowledge of borderline style is sufficient and we should just accept what the book says.

Following the teachings of Dr. Hagop Akiskal I believe that there is a good separation between bipolar disorder and the so-called Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD). I believe BPD is not a real diagnosis but a psychological style of looking at problems and situations with a black and white approach. As I said in my previous reaction to this excellent paper, my experience for the past 20 years is that most "borderline"patients are in fact bipolar individuals taking antidepressants and for that reason most of the time irritable and impulsive. It could be argued that even if they are a small number still qualify for a diagnostic category I would not have a problem with that if a criteria to separate them from the bipolar patients is clearly introduced.

It is true that bipolar patients can have a "borderline organization" and will continue to see the world as "either good or bad" even after the mood is stable but they are a minority. I am also aware that most academics will dismiss this statement because "it lacks research support" but I would ask to them to explain me why thousands of patients have improved when I stopped the antidepressants and continue to be stable (no longer "borderline") after many years.

With regard to the symptoms listed for both, BPD and bipolar spectrum disorders, I find intriguing that this paper and most textbooks minimize the significance of racing thoughts. This is the case too with the ADHD labeling of everybody who presents as "hyperactive."

I believe that asking about racing thoughts and paying more attention to the worsening of symptoms when antidepressants are introduced (or excessive caffeine intake is reported) can be two useful tools in making a final diagnosis in a patient that is quick to temper, impulsive, restless, insomniac and moody.

Manuel Mota-Castillo, MD
Assistant Clinical Professor
University of Central Florida and St. Matthew University
Orlando, Florida

by Yvonne Barash | March 04, 2012 2:49 PM EST

So then, some patients have been misdiagnosed as "borderline personality disorder", when in fact they turn out to be bipolar patients under the influence of antidepressants. For these people, perhaps a switch from antidepressants to mood stabilizers would be prudent.






 
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