BorderlineCentral
Your One Stop Source For Information On
Borderline Personality Disorder

 
 
Home | About David Oliver | Success Stories | Success Profiles | How-To Courses | Articles/Stories | News | Contact | Site Map

Google
Web www.borderlinecentral.com

Does Your Loved One Have Borderline Personality Disorder?
Discover how to cope and deal with your loved one's Borderline Personality Disorder.
Click here for FREE information.
 

Do You Have Borderline Personality Disorder?
Discover how to cope and deal with your Borderline Personality Disorder disorder.
Click here for FREE information.
 

Child With Borderline Personality Disorder?
Learn How to REALLY Help and Support Your Child.
Click here for FREE information.
 

History of Borderline Personality Disorder

In an article by Elizabeth Finley-Belgrad, MD, of the Department of Psychiatry at Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine, the history of Borderline Personality Disorder is reported to date back to 1941, when Zilboorg described a disorder that he considered to be a mild version of schizophrenia. Patients with this disorder had what he called associative thinking, disturbances of reality testing, pervasive anger, and shallowness of effect.

In 1942, Deutsch described a group of patients lacking a consistent sense of identity without a source of inner direction. She created the term “As-If Personalities,” because the patients completely identified with those people upon whom they were dependent. Hoch and Polatin later created the term “Pseudoneurotic Schizophrenia” to describe a disorder characterized by pananxiety, panphobias, and pansexuality.

Schmideberg first described Borderline Personality Disorder in 1959 as a disorder of character.

Grinker and associates made the first efforts describing Borderline Personality Disorder through systematic empirical investigation.

Kernberg conceptualized Borderline Personality Disorder in 1975 as a diagnosis within a particular group of patients with primitive defense mechanisms. Previous to this time, many different terms were used describing the condition in patients who had similar traits.

In 1938, Stern referred to the borderline between psychoses and neuroses, which is where the term “Borderline Personality Disorder” originated.

The original Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-I) would have given patients with the criteria for Borderline Personality Disorder the diagnosis of “Emotionally Unstable Personality.”

The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders – Second Edition (DSM-II) still contained nothing that would adequately describe Borderline Personality Disorder.

In the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders – Third Edition (DSM-III), however, Borderline Personality Disorder became a diagnosis, based on a systematic description of observable clinical characteristics.

In 1994, this description of Borderline Personality Disorder was carried over into the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders – Fourth Edition (DSM-IV) as well.

Borderline Personality Disorder has historically been considered as being on the border between psychosis and neurosis, which is how it got its name. This disorder is characterized by marked instability in functioning, mood, effect, and interpersonal relationships.

About the Author

David Oliver is the founder of BorderlineCentral.com a one stop source of information on how to cope and deal with borderline personality disorder.

Back to Article List

FREE Borderline News,
Tips, Tricks and Secrets
Name:
E-mail:
Other:

If you are in a crisis please call:
1-800-273-TALK (8255)

Special Survey For Those
Who Are Caring For Someone With
Borderline Personality Disorder

3 Steps to Wealth, Success and True Happiness
Click here to discover the self help formula that can make money, help weight loss, heal relationships and much MUCH more.

More Love, Money, Confidence and Inner Peace
Click here for more information.

Improve Your Emotional Health
Reduce Your Stress Levels
Increase Your Brain Power

Click here for more information.

This Week's Borderline Personality Disorder News

The Cutting Truth of Borderline Personality Disorder
FYI Living
Cutting and other forms of self-mutilation may be hard for many people to understand. People who self-harm are more likely to have an underlying emotional problems, such as Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD). According to a study by German researchers, people with BPD may engage in self-injury because they get a sense of emotional relief from physical pain. BPD is a complex set of... Read More

Click here for all Borderline News.

Visit Our Other Websites:
Bipolar Central
Health and Wealth Central
Mental Health World
ScizoInfo.com - coming soon

Home | About David Oliver | Success Stories | Success Profiles | How-To Courses | Articles/Stories | News | Contact | Site Map