3 resultados para borderline personality

em Repositório Científico da Universidade de Évora - Portugal


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Pretendemos estudar quais os traços desadaptativos de personalidade que se relacionam com os sintomas depressivos, a afectividade positiva e negativa, numa amostra de 187 estudantes universitários, entre os 18 e os 43 anos. Calculámos as correlações entre as escalas de padrões de personalidade e as escalas de padrões graves de personalidade do Inventário Multiaxial clínico de Millon II (MCMI-II) com os sintomas depressivos avaliados pela Escala de Depressão do Centro de Estudos Epidemiológicos e com a afectividade positiva e negativa avaliadas pela Escala de Afectividade Positiva e Afectividade Negativa. Realizámos uma análise da regressão múltipla utilizando as escalas de padrões de personalidade do MCMI-II como predictores e o resultado na CES-O, como variável dependente. Obtivemos uma correlação significativa entre os padrões de personalidade borderline, masoquista, esquizotípico, negativista e evitante e paranóide e os sintomas depressivos. A afectividade negativa apresenta-se também positivamente correlacionada com os padrões dependente e esquizóide. A afectividade positiva correlacionou-se significativa e positivamente com os padrões histriónico e narcisista e negativamente com os padrões esquizóide, esquizotípico, negativista, borderline, evitante e masoquista. Na análise de regressão, o padrão borderline prevê a presença de sintomas depressivos e os padrões sádico e dependente também, mas num sentido negativo. /ABSTRACT: We intendend to study wich personality traits relate to depressiva symptoms, and positive and negative affectivity, in a sample of 187 university students, between 18 and 43 years. We did the correlation between the personality patterns scales and the personality patterns of severe personality with the depressive symptoms measured by the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale and the positive and negative affectivity measured by the Positive Affect and Negative Affect Shedule. We did a multiple regression analysis using the personality patterns scale of Millon Clinical Multiaxial lnventory (MCMI-II) as predictors and the result of CES-D, as dependent variable. We obtained a significant correlation between the borderline, masochist, schizotypal, negativistic, avoidant and paranoid personality patterns and the depressive symptoms. Negative affectivity relates also positively with dependent and schizoid patterns. Positive affectivity correlated significant and positively with histrionic and narcissistic personality patterns and negatively with schizoid, schizotypal, negativistic, borderline, avoidant and masochist personality patterns. ln the regression analysis, the borderline pattern predicts the presence of depressive symptoms as well as the sadistic and dependent, but in the negative sense.

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This study tested a prediction model of suicidality in a sample of young adults. Predictor variables included perceived parental rejection, self-criticism, neediness, and depression. Participants (N 5 165) responded to the Depressive Experiences Questionnaire,theInventoryforAssessingMemoriesofParentalRearingBehavior, theCenterforEpidemiologicalStudiesDepressionScale,andtheSuicideBehaviors Questionnaire—Revised. Perceived parental rejection, personality, and depression wereassessedinitiallyatTime1,anddepressionagainandsuicidalitywereassessed 5 months later at Time 2. The proposed structural equation model fit the observed data well in a sample of young adults. Parental rejection demonstrated direct and indirect relationships with suicidality, and self-criticism and neediness each had indirect associations with suicidality. Depression was directly related to suicidality. Implications for clinical practice are discussed.

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The present study extends previous findings by examining whether defense styles, selfobject needs, attachment styles relate to Neediness and Self-Criticism, as maladaptive personality dimensions focused, respectively, on relatedness and self-definition in an Iranian sample. Three hundred and fifty two participants completed a socio-demographic questionnaire as well as the Persian forms of the Depressive Experiences Questionnaire, Experience of Close Relationships-Revised, Defense Style Questionnaire, Beck Depression Inventory–II and Selfobject Needs Inventory. Two Multiple Linear Regression Analyses, entering Self-criticism and Neediness as criterion variables, were computed. According to the results high Attachment anxiety, high Immature defenses, high depressive symptoms, and high need for idealization were related to self-criticism, and explained 47% of its variance. In addition, high attachment anxiety, low mature defenses, high neurotic defenses, high avoidance of mirroring, and low avoidance of idealization/twinship were related to neediness, and explained 40% of its variance. A Principal Component Analysis was performed, entering all the studied variables. Three factors emerged; one describing a maladaptive form of psychological functioning and two describing more mature modes of psychological functioning. The results are discussed in their implications for the understanding of neediness and self-criticism as maladaptive personality dimensions focused, respectively, on relatedness and self-definition.