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Adolescent Psychiatry

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 2210-6766
ISSN (Online): 2210-6774

Adolescence and Borderline Behavior - Between Personality Development and Personality Disorder

Author(s): Annette Streeck-Fischer

Volume 3, Issue 3, 2013

Page: [220 - 232] Pages: 13

DOI: 10.2174/2210676611303030003

Price: $65

Abstract

Background: In recent years, an increasing interest in personality disorders in childhood and adolescence has been observed. This is partly due to recent findings of temperament, personality and neurobiological research.

Method: This article reviews the history of the concept of borderline conditions in children and adolescents, and presents recent evidence from developmental psychology and neurobiology to support the diagnosis in adolescents as a disorder of development. An overview of treatment based on the decades-long experience with these patients at the Tiefenbrunn Clinic in Germany is described.

Results: While the term personality disorder implies enduring traits, the evidence suggests that it is relatively unstable in adults as well as adolescents. Concerns about labeling adolescents with a presumably lifelong condition have hampered research on pathogenesis and treatment. Nevertheless, some adolescents with severe impairments in functioning do meet adult criteria for BPD, and do respond to the tailored treatment approaches that have been developed for them.

Conclusions: The psychopathology of adolescents with BPD is probably a result of the interaction of the adolescent developmental process and defects in attachment and mentalization similar to those in adults with BPD. The term “developmental borderline personality disorder” is suggested to reflect the fluidity of this condition. Appropriate intervention requires a comprehensive multimodal approach in which individual therapy takes place within a protective framework of boundaries and limits.

Keywords: Adolescent, development, developmental psychopathology, borderline personality disorder


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