Provisional: Borderline Personality Disorder Differential DX
Provisional: Borderline Personality Disorder Differential DX
Provisional: Borderline Personality Disorder Differential DX
You are an intern working in an accident and emergency department. A 25 year-old woman, Kim,
is brought in by her boyfriend. Relevant information that you obtain from Kim includes:
That she has had an “overdose” of 5 paracetamol tablets – total dose 2.5 g. She also
superficially cut her wrist five times with a kitchen knife. She states these were an effort
to both hurt and kill herself.
She has been cutting her thighs, abdomen, and wrists since early puberty.
Before seeing Kim, you reviewed her emergency department file and note that she has had six
similar presentations to the accident and emergency department this year. She has been
reviewed by the Psychiatry team at each presentation, but the psychiatry notes are not available
to you.
Kim is sitting in a hospital gown with her wrist bandaged; she appears calm and in good
spirits.
Nursing staff are clearly ignoring this young woman.
Your tasks are to:
Obtain further information helpful to making a risk assessment about the patient from the
examiner.
Present the likely diagnosis, risk assessment and an initial management plan to the
examiner.
Approach:
Ensure safety of self and staff. Verbal de-escalation or security if needed.
Psychiatric history, MSE, risk assessment, physical examination with an open and non-
judgmental approach.
Chaperone should be present during patient assessment.
Confirm provisional diagnosis (collateral history, investigations to rule out organic causes)
Management according to Biopsychosocial framework.
Clinical history (from patient and collateral from boyfriend)
Patient details – age, what they do, where they live, partners and children
Current suicidal attempt
o Details surrounding this; suicidal intent
o Medical issues:
When ingested paracetamol tablets
How many tablets
Any other substances used during this overdose attempt
o History of suicide and self harm
Risk assessment
o At risk mental state?
Depresion, hopelessness, despair, feelings of worthlessness
Severe anger, hostility
Presence of psychotic symptoms (auditory hallucinations about death;
delusions of jealousy, and paranoia)
o Suicidal attempt
Clear intention of high lethality
Access to means and firearms (mandatory reporting
Risk to self (financial, reputational, sexual and physical)
Risk to others and children (mandatory reporting)
o Substance disorder
Current misuse of alcohol and other drugs
o Collateral history from family, carers, and medical records
Able to confirm patient’s story
Reliability of patient’s account of events
o Strengths, supports, coping methods and connectedness
Expressed communication
Availability of support
Willingness to get professional help
o Reliability, confidence and changeability of risk assessment and level
DSM-5 criteria for BPD
o Pervasive pattern of impulsivity and unstable relationships, affects, self-image and
behaviour
o Features present by early adulthood and in multiple contexts
o At least 5 of the following (IMPULSIVE)
Impulse: Impulsivity in at least two potentially harmful ways (spending,
sexual activity, substance use, binge eating etc)
Moody: Unstable mood/affect
Paranoid under stress: Transient, stress-related paranoid ideation or
dissociative symptoms
Unstable self-image
Labile intense interpersonal relationships
Suicidal: Recurrent suicidal threats or attempts of self-mutilations
Inappropriate anger: Difficulty controlling anger
Vulnerable to abandonment: Frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined
abandonment
Emptiness: Chronic feelings of emptiness
Other features of BPD
o Splitting
Tend to see the world in polarized, over-simplified, all or nothing terms
o Using self-harm as a method of help seeking (getting into hospital), attention from
others (be good or bad), or relieves pain (from overwhelming thoughts)
Severity
o Significant distress or impairment in social, occupational or other important areas of
functioning
Screen with McLean Screening Instrument for BPD (10 items) – self-reported measure
Screen for co-morbid psychiatric symptoms
o Psychotic:
Hallucinations (visual and auditory)
Delusions (persecution, reference, passivity, broadcast)
o Mood:
MDD: SIGECAPS
Any previous episodes of Mania (DIGFAST > 1 week)
o Other Cluster B personality disorders
Examination
Mental state examination (MSE) + physical examination (wound + excluding organic causes)
Mental state examination
o Appearance – evidence of self-neglect and self-mutilating behaviour
o Behaviour – Eye contact, cooperative, psychomotor agitation or retardation
o Speech – Tone, rate, volume; might have outburst of anger
o Mood
o Affect – Labile; dysphoric, irritable, anxious
o Intact thought form
o Thought content: suicidal ideation, feelings of emptiness, paranoid ideation,
dissociative symptoms
o Insight: Limited or poor
o Intact judgement and cognition
Physical examination
o Vitals: Hemodynamically stable given wrist cutting
o Constitutional symptoms for infections and malignancies
o Signs of hyperthyroidism and goitre
o Signs of overdose and drug intoxication
Investigation
Diagnosis of BPD is mostly clinical; through multiple sychiatric interviews and mental state
examinations; other investigations are not necessary
Other investigations to be performed:
o Bedside
Urine drug screen
ECG
o Laboratory
Paracetamol levels
Blood alcohol level
FBC, TFT, EUC, glucose (if clinically indicated)
Management
Ongoing risk assessment and management
Consider voluntary vs involuntary treatment, hospital admission
o Safety in acute crisis – no weapons, risks, may require isolation
o Aiming for least restrictive and most effective care
o Indications for hospitalization (under Mental Health Act)
Suicidal intent and lack of adequate safeguard
Unable to take care of self
Intent to harm others (e.g. partner)
Psychotic symptoms
MDT setting involving psychiatrist, medical team, psychologist, SW, GP
Biopsychosocial approach
o Biological intervention
Tetanus shot if unknown vaccination status
Pharmacotherapy does not alter the nature or course of the disease
Adjunct pharmacological therapies in acute setting, mainly for symptomatic
control:
For affective dysregulation/aggression/interpersonal problems –
mood stabilizer or antipsychotic
For co-occuring MDD, PTSD, anxiety – antidepressant (SSRI)
Beware of risk of medicinal overdose
o Psychological intervention (mainstay of therapy)
Dialectical behavioural therapy: Weekly, individual psychotherapy and
group skills training
Like CBT but also teaches distraction techniques (positive coping
skills, resilience e.g. holding ice in hand or having an elastic band
around wrist to flick rather than cutting)
Targeting patients between 15-25 years of age
Program consists of 4 components:
o Interpersonal response patterns
o Emotional regulation
o Distress tolerance
o Mindfulness
Aim to teach skills to cope with sudden, intense surges of emotion.
Characteristics:
o Support-oriented
Identify strengths + build on these; so person can
feel better about him/herself + their life
o Cognitive-based
Identify thoughts, beliefs and assumptions that
make life harder
E.g. I have to be perfect at everything, If I
get angry, I’m a terrible person, etc.
+ Helps people learn different ways of thinking that
will make life more bearable
E.g. I don’t have to be perfect at things for
people to care about me; Everyone gets
angry, it’s a normal emotion, etc.
o Collaborative
Requires constant attention to relationships
between clients and staff
Encouraged to work out problems in their
relationships with their therapist
Asks people to complete homework assignments,
role-play new ways of interacting with others,
practice skills such as soothing yourself when upset
Crucial part of DBT; taught in weekly lectures,
reviewed in weekly homework groups and referred
to in nearly every group
Individual therapist helps the person to learn, apply
and master the DBT skills
Mentalisation-based therapy
Focuses on patient’s understanding of their own intentions and
those of others.
Aims to make the patient more in tune with their thoughts in order
to understand the impact of these thoughts on themselves and on
others.
It is good for identifying maladaptive or inappropriate emotions
which can then be altered to facilitate better and closer
relationships.
Interpersonal therapy
Developing personal skills to help patient engage/interact with their
loved ones.
Four key areas:
o Grief
o Interpersonal disputes
o Role transitions (developing coping strategies to deal with
change e.g. job loss, relationship changes).
o Interpersonal sensitivity (identifying areas that one can work
on to help build and maintain relationships).
o Social interventions
Family therapy and educate family members on BPD
Develop acute crisis plan involving family, partner, and carers with patient’s
consent
First aid course for carers