Skip to the main content

Conference paper

BIPOLAR II DISORDER AND BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER - CO-MORBIDITY OR SPECTRUM?

Mark Agius ; Department of Psychiatry University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
Jean Lee
Jenny Gardner
David Wotherspoon


Full text: english pdf 72 Kb

page 197-201

downloads: 380

cite


Abstract

We assess the number of patients who we have on the Database of a Community Mental Health Team in the UK who have Bipolar Disorder and Borderline Personality Disorder. We report how many of these have been seen as having both disorders.
Hence we discuss the issue as to whether Borderline Personality disorder is to be placed within the bipolar spectrum. We note the difficulties regarding the use of phenomenology alone to decide this problem, and we note the similarities in genetics, neuroimaging
observations and neurobiological mechanisms among the following conditions; Bipolar Disorder, Unipolar Depression, Post-traumatic Stress Disorder, and Borderline Personality Disorder. Ethiologies such as Trauma, Abuse, Childhood adversity and
exposure to War appear to influence all these conditions via epigenetic mechanisms. Hence we argue that for a spectrum to be proposed, conditions in the spectrum need to be underpinned by similar or common Neuroimaging and neurobiological
mechanisms.On this basis, it may be reasonable to include Borderline Personality Disorder within a broadly described bipolar spectrum. New details of the common Neurobiological mechanisms continue to emerge.

Keywords

Hrčak ID:

264934

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/264934

Publication date:

1.7.2012.

Visits: 631 *