PERSONALITY DISORDER

. I can be smooth and lovable and be beautiful. Ican made a very honest opinion and it’s hard to leave me speechless. Sometimes I find myself dreaming of success and unlimited energy, and beauty. I often use deception to cheat, catch, or defraud others for personal gain. To be honest, I don't really care about other people's feelings, or their suffering. It doesn't sound like Hank you know, does it? These are all statements from the Personality Disorders Self-Assessment Scale, which allows patients to describe themselves, placing each statement according to how accurate we think it is. To be honest, you can't really rely on this kind of reporting to check out what we're talking about today because while some people who are overconfident or very power-loving or deceptive can tell you that there is, there is a certain subset that won't. Many of the diseases we have talked about so far are considered "ego-dystonic" which means that people with them know they have a problem and are prone to worrying about their symptoms.

As someone with Bipolar Disorder or OCDgenerally you know that they have an attitude and do not like what you are doing to them. But some distractions are more difficult then. They are "ego-syntonic," the person they are dealing with doesn't think they have a problem and sometimes, they think the problem is with everyone. Human disorder falls into this category. This is a disorder characterized by inconsistent, disruptive, and persistent behaviors that interfere with social functioning and other functions - whether the patient is aware of it or not. Unlike many other cases we have discussed, personality disorders are often viewed as chronic and persistent, causing serious health problems. And as you can tell from these self-assessment statements, they can range from a harmless manifestation of narcissism, to a lack of empathy for others and anxiety. Not only can personality disorders be difficult to detect and understand, it can also be frightening. Most of the extreme and complex problems go with the words you may have seen: psychopathy and sociopathy. I mean, like the killer killers here, the mob bosses, Vlad the Impaler. Culture has been studying the characteristics of human personality for thousands of years, but the concept of personality disorder is a relatively new concept.

Many of our modern sections of these problems are based on the work of a German psychiatrist, Kurt Schneider, who was one of the first investigators in what was then called psychopathy and published a research paper in 1923. Today, DSM 5 contains diagnoses of ten different personality disorders, organized into three groups. The first set, group A, includes the so-called "strange" or "standing" personality traits. For example, a person with an antagonistic personality disorder may feel unfaithful to others and may be constantly employed and suspicious while a person with a schizoid personality disorder will appear highly selective and indifferent, showing no interest in relationships and a few emotional responses. Cluster B includes both emotional and non-emotional traits. For example, a gluttonous personality can reflect a selfish, self-centered attitude. At the moment, histrionic personality may seem to play a part in gaining attention, even risking it with serious, dangerous, and suicidal thoughts. Cluster B behavior can be truly self-destructive and intimidating, and this disorder is often associated with frequent hospital stays.

 Finally, Cluster C incorporates disturbing, frightening, or avoidable personality traits. For example, those with personality and substance abuse problems often avoid meeting new people or putting themselves at risk and show a lack of self-confidence, a greater need for care, and greater fear of abandonment. Now, in the past, and, to a large extent, today, some of these categories have been controversial. Many researchers say that some of these conditions are so complex that it is impossible for them to isolate themselves. Narcissistic personality disorder, for example, has many factors such as histrionic personality disorder. And because of this gray area, the most common personality disorder is actually a personality disorder that is not otherwise defined or PDNOS. The findings of this diagnosis suggest that while doctors may diagnose a patient's personality disorder, obtaining information on the condition can be confusing and difficult. Another proposed way to diagnose these problems is the Dimensional Model, which, in fact, removes the unexplained distraction and places it with various personality traits or symptoms, measuring each individual on a scale.
"Human Disorders" may well change. One of the most well-studied personality problems right now is Borderline Personality Disorder, or BPD. Borderline makes it sound like patients are the same, very close to being healthy, but not really, but that's not it , self-inflicted wounds, such as cuts or bruises. People with BPD were often abused by doctors as ‘difficult’ or ‘seeking attention’, but now we understand BPD as a set of learned behaviors and emotional responses in abusive or neglected environments, especially in childhood. meaning, people with the disease learn that anger or self-harm has helped them to cope with abusive situations, but as a result, they end up using them in non-abusive situations. ging in patients and clinics alike, the good news is that some psychotherapies help even the most severe suffering, frequently put BPD patients to sleep. But perhaps the most well-known, and frank, disease that afflicts humanity is Antisocial Personality Disorder.

Now, you've heard of this before, but it's probably one of the same words, "psychopathy" or "sociopathy." People with Antisocial Personality Disorder, usually men, show a lack of conscience for wrongdoing, friends and family members. Their harmful behavior stems from childhood or adolescence, beginning with lying, fighting, stealing, violence, or exploitation. As adults, people with the disease are thought to be exposed to two conditions: whether they are able to keep their jobs and commit violent crimes or misconduct; or be clever, funny, or cruel bosses who come into power. Tony Soprano would have been able to get a diagnosis, even if he was not Almost as bad as, the killer assassin Ted Bundy or Vlad the Impaler, a famous 15th-century Romanian official who witnessed some 100,000 people being beaten or licked by the skin of their goats' feet. Yes. That happened. Apart from these common regrets, insensitivity, and sometimes criminal behavior, crime is not always a matter of human behavior. Certainly many people with criminal records do not fit that psychopathic profile. Much of it shows remorse, love and concern for friends and family.

And yet, even though anti-social activists make up about 1% of the population, they estimated in one study that nearly 16% of people arrested. So how does one end up with a debilitating disease? Yes, as you might expect, the causes may be a combination of biological and psychological traits, both genetic and environmental. Although no one has found a single genetic predictor of Antisocial Personality Disorder, twin studies and findings suggest that relatives of those with a mental disorder are more likely to engage in mental behavior themselves. And early symptoms are sometimes diagnosed at an early age of three or four years, often as a disability in a state of panic, in other words, a lower response than usual in things that often frighten or frighten children such as loud and unpleasant noises. Most children need to be burned only in a hot tub to be able to stay away, but children who end up displaying Negative Personality as adults do not cover or care about learning outcomes when they are young. From there, as we have seen in other disturbances, genetic and biological influences may interfere with the aggressive or careless nature of such a call in a strange and degrading way.

While most traumatized people do not grow up to be murderers or artisans, genes seem to put other people first in empathy or abuse. Meanwhile, studies examining the neural basis of Antisocial Disorder have shown that when provocative images, such as a battered child or a woman with a knife to the neck, those with psychopathic personality traits showed less change in heart rate and sweat, compared to control groups. And the lack of social control to control pressure and other symptoms has been linked to deficiencies in other brain structures. Another study compared PET scans to 41 convicted murderers and non-criminals found that the killers found guilty significantly reduced activity on the frontal lobe, an area associated with influence control and moral restraint. In fact, violent repeat offenders had less than 11% of the lobe tissue below the normal brain. Their brains also respond slightly to facial expressions of stress or grief, something

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