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CNS Spectr. 2003 Oct;8(10):737-54.
Comment in: CNS Spectr. 2003 Oct;8(10):724.
Abuse and neglect in childhood: relationship
to personality disorder diagnoses.
Bierer LM, Yehuda R, Schmeidler J, Mitropoulou V, New AS, Silverman JM, Siever
LJ.
Department of Psychiatry, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York,
USA. linda.bierer@med.va.gov
BACKGROUND: Childhood history of abuse and neglect has been associated
with personality disorders and has been observed in subjects with lifetime histories
of suicidality and self-injury. Most of these findings have been generated from
inpatient clinical samples.
METHODS: This study evaluated self-rated indices of sustained childhood
abuse and neglect in an outpatient sample of well-characterized personality disorder
subjects (n=182) to determine the relative associations of childhood trauma indices
to specific personality disorder diagnoses or clusters and to lifetime history
of suicide attempts or gestures. Subjects met criteria for ~2.5 Axis II diagnoses
and 24% reported past suicide attempts. The Childhood Trauma Questionnaire was
administered to assess five dimensions of childhood trauma exposure (emotional,
physical, and sexual abuse, and emotional and physical neglect). Logistic regression
was employed to evaluate salient predictors among the trauma measures for each
cluster, personality disorder, and history of attempted suicide and self-harm.
All analyses controlled for gender distribution.
RESULTS: Seventy-eight percent of subjects met dichotomous criteria for
some form of childhood trauma; a majority reported emotional abuse and neglect.
The dichotomized criterion for global trauma severity was predictive of cluster
B, borderline, and antisocial personality disorder diagnoses. Trauma scores were
positively associated with cluster A, negatively with cluster C, but were not
significantly associated with cluster B diagnoses. Among the specific diagnoses
comprising cluster A, paranoid disorder alone was predicted by sexual, physical,
and emotional abuse. Within cluster B, only antisocial personality disorder showed
significant associations with trauma scores, with specific prediction by sexual
and physical abuse. For borderline personality disorder, there were gender interactions
for individual predictors, with emotional abuse being the only significant trauma
predictor, and only in men. History of suicide gestures was associated with emotional
abuse in the entire sample and in women only; self-mutilatory behavior was associated
with emotional abuse in men.
CONCLUSION: These results suggest that childhood emotional abuse and neglect
are broadly represented among personality disorders, and associated with indices
of clinical severity among patients with borderline personality disorder. Childhood
sexual and physical abuse are highlighted as predictors of both paranoid and antisocial
personality disorders. These results help qualify prior observations of the association
of childhood sexual abuse with borderline personality disorder.
PMID: 14712172 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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