PMID: 16613426Apr 15, 2006Paper

The implications of attachment theory and research for understanding borderline personality disorder

Development and Psychopathology
Kenneth N Levy

Abstract

Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a highly prevalent, chronic, and debilitating psychiatric problem characterized by a pattern of chaotic and self-defeating interpersonal relationships, emotional lability, poor impulse control, angry outbursts, frequent suicidality, and self-mutilation. Recently, psychopathology researchers and theorists have begun to understand fundamental aspects of BPD such as unstable, intense interpersonal relationships, feelings of emptiness, bursts of rage, chronic fears of abandonment and intolerance for aloneness, and lack of a stable sense of self as stemming from impairments in the underlying attachment organization. These investigators have noted that the impulsivity, affective lability, and self-damaging actions that are the hallmark of borderline personality occur in an interpersonal context and are often precipitated by real or imagined events in relationships. This article reviews attachment theory and research as a means of providing a developmental psychopathology perspective on BPD. Following a brief review of Bowlby's theory of attachment, and an overview of the evidence with respect to the major claims of attachment theory, I discuss individual differences, the evidence that these di...Continue Reading

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Citations

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Nov 26, 2010·Current Psychiatry Reports·Kenneth N LevyChristina M Temes
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Sep 22, 2018·Journal of Clinical Psychology·Kenneth N LevyCaroline V Gooch

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