Post on 16-Dec-2015
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Multi-impulsive Eating Disorders:another slant on
Borderline Personality
Jane Morris & Vicky HayJane Morris & Vicky Hay
OVERVIEW:What is the relationship between eating
disorders and personality disorders?Why does it matter?What is it like to experience ‘multi-
impulsive eating disorder?How can we help?
What is the relationship between What is the relationship between disorders and personality?disorders and personality?
Personality patterns may make people more vulnerable to a particular range of illnesses – ‘type A’ personality and heart disease, perfectionists and anxiety disorders etc
Particular disorders may shape personality – people with chronic illnesses often become carers, children with dyslexia may develop rule-breaking or highly creative personalities
What is the relationship between What is the relationship between eating disorders and personality?eating disorders and personality? Do particular personality patterns predipose
a person to develop an ED? Does the experience of suffering from an
ED influence the development of personality?
Do particular personality structures determine the nature of the eating disorder experienced by the sufferer?
Eating disorders ?Eating disorders ?Anorexia nervosa Anorexia nervosa (since 15(since 15thth century) century)Low weight obsessively achieved because of fear of fatness. 2 subtypes AN-R and AN-BN
Bulimia nervosa Bulimia nervosa (since 1970s – (since 1970s – Russell et al) Russell et al) Attempted weight loss by starvation leads to vicious cycle of restriction/binge/purge at normal weight
Binge eating disorder Binge eating disorder (since 1980s (since 1980s and 1990s)and 1990s) Binges and periods of attempted restriction but without other compensatory behaviours – often overweight
Co-morbidity with eating disordersCo-morbidity with eating disorders Anorexia often found in individuals – and
families – who also show OCD, anxiety disorders, ASD
Bulimia often seen with depression, substance abuse
So-called ‘axis II disorders’ also tend to cluster in similar ways – obsessive-compulsive PD with AN, impulsive PD with Bulimic type illnesses
DSM-IV personality disordersDSM-IV personality disorders
Cluster A – ‘odd’ eg schizotypal PDsCluster A – ‘odd’ eg schizotypal PDsCluster B – flamboyant, histrionic, Cluster B – flamboyant, histrionic,
narcissistic, borderlinenarcissistic, borderlineCluster C – avoidant, rigid, Cluster C – avoidant, rigid,
obsessessionalobsessessional
DSM–IV (APA, 1994
Diagnostic criteria for borderline personality disorder At least five of: Intense and unstable personal relationships Frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined abandonment Identity disturbance or problems with sense of self Impulsivity that is potentially self-damaging Recurrent suicidal or parasuicidal behaviour Affective instability Chronic feelings of emptiness Inappropriate intense or uncontrollable anger Transient stress-related paranoid ideation or severe dissociative symptoms
Research on Eating Disorders Research on Eating Disorders and personality disorders:and personality disorders: 1988 Powers et al 77% BN patients 1989 Garner et al 61% BN patients 1990 Schmidt & Telch 43% BN patients 1994 Steiger et al 28% BN patients
...met diagnostic criteria for at least one personality disorder (DSM IV, APA 1994)
Research on Eating Disorders Research on Eating Disorders and personality disorders:and personality disorders:
Braun et al, 1994 found that 69% all ED patients had at least one PD Of those with bulimic subtypes, 31% had a Cluster
B Personality Disorder – mostly borderline type NONE of the purely restricting anorexic patients
had a cluster B personality Disorder Cluster C personality disorders spread evenly
across all types of ED
Research on Eating Disorders Research on Eating Disorders and personality disorders:and personality disorders:
1992 Hertzog (210 patients) found that the commonest PD to be associated with an ED is borderline type
2000 Matsunya studied patients recovered from EDs. 26% had at least one PD. Cluster B strongly associated with bulimic subtypes
Two extremes of eating disorders and broadly two ‘groups’ in our service
1- ‘STABILITY’ Those who relieve anxiety and guilt by means of avoidance and rituals of sameness (obsessive compulsive behaviours). Strong attachment to the disorder – other people seen as obstacles to or protectors of the disorder
2 - ‘INSTABILITY’Those who relieve intolerable emotions – anxiety, boredom, shame – by means of ‘acting out’ behaviours often involving risk-taking (impulsive or borderline). Strong but insecure attachments to other people – disorder serves to communicate perceived needs, albeit maladaptively
MULTI-IMPULSIVE BULIMIA (Lacey, 1993)
Bulimia nervosa + at least 3 of the following:
Heroin, LSD, amphetamines, street tranquillisers
Abuse of alcohol Stealing/ shop lifting self harm – Overdoses, self-cutting
or burningAnd frequently ‘promiscuous sexual
behaviours’, inability to be truthful
Why does this matter?Why does this matter?
Attempts to work therapeutically with people with EDs depend crucially on development of a respectful therapeutic relationship
Understanding attachment styles and personality profiles is helpful in formulating reasonable expectations of people in treatment
Those working to help people with personality disorders need to be aware of the effects of starvation and the results of other eating disordered behaviours on the capacity to learn
Why does this matter?Why does this matter? People engaging in weight-losing behaviours
display many more behaviours than food restriction
Paradoxically, whilst these attempts to control weight are attempts at control and stability, in fact they lead to increasing amplifications of instability
and make it harder and harder for people to learn ordinary skills for coping with life or attracting help from other people
Self-induced vomiting Chewing & spitting outMedication abuse - Appetite suppressants – including gum, cigarettes - alternative, OTC & www medications – laxatives, ipecac, pain killers to allow exercise despite damageOverexercise – often secret, obsessive houseworkOveractivity – ‘fidgetting, twitching, never sitting down, fetching one item at a timeCooling – inadequate dress, open windows etc‘Body-checking’– both when alone and in terms of comparisons with others - and body image avoidanceSpoiling or messing of food, bizarre combinationsCruising ‘pro-ana’ websites/emailing fellow sufferersTHESE ARE NOT JUST HANDICAPS TO WEIGHT GAIN - THEY DAMAGE QUALITY OF LIFE , MAINTAIN THE DISORDER – AND MIMIC PERSONALITY DISORDER
Effects of eating disorders on the brain Hypoglycemia – chronic ‘restrictors’ show adaptation
– not so for those who binge-purge, where rapid swings in glu levels act like drug highs and withdrawal
Hypoglycemia mimics symptoms of anxiety, and loss of K+ and Mg++ makes people even more nervous and twitchy
Starvation makes us aggressive – difference between hunger and anger often hard to discriminate – and utterly preoccupied with food
Eating disorders and self harm DSH as primary? For some patients self-starving is a form
of self-harm and may replace the ‘need’ for cutting, overdosing etc. Body image gratification may then ensue and become a perpetuating factor
ED as primary? Others resort to these other forms of self-harm for the first time if their anorexia is ‘taken away from them’ or if they ‘break the rules’ themselves. For some patients this is ‘neutralising’ behaviour, whilst for others it is a communication of protest
Some patients remain natural restrictors all their lives, unable to achieve any peace of mind unless they take constant control But for the majority, with age and the passage of time, ‘graduation’ is from restricting anorexia to bulimic type anorexia, to normal weight bulimia and also then to other forms of self-harm
Auto/biographical literatureAuto/biographical literature
Alice in the Looking GlassAlice in the Looking Glass The Best Little Girl in the WorldThe Best Little Girl in the World Stick FigureStick Figure My Hungry HellMy Hungry Hell WastedWasted Wounded: Fighting my DemonsWounded: Fighting my Demons
What does it feel like to What does it feel like to experience a multi-impulsive experience a multi-impulsive eating disorder?eating disorder?
Vicky Hay, author of
‘Wounded: Fighting my Demons’
What might be helpful?What might be helpful? CBT? Formulates binge-purge episodes in terms
of a vicious cycle of restraint > binge >purge +further restraint> bigger binge> purge etc etc
IPT-BN? Formulates binge-purge episodes in terms of failure to cope with interpersonal incidents
DBT? Formulates DSH and eating disordered behaviour in terms of failure of emotional regulation and distress tolerance
What can help?What can help?
Importance of - Physiological stability intrapsychic and interpersonal aspects and of the therapeutic relationship
CBTCBT Beck, 1979, Fairburn, Waller Links physical, emotional and cognitive aspects of
experience Psychoeducation – what is going wrong at present and what
will be expected during the course of therapy? Establishing of stable pattern of 3 meals & 3 snacks daily,
weekly weight recorded on graph Getting rid of binge-purge behaviours and using problem
solving, thought challenging and other cognitive techniques to cope with emotional and interpersonal difficulties
But 50% patients not helped by CBT-BN alone
IPTIPT Klerman & Weissman, Fairburn Fairburn’s model of IPT actually turns its back on the
eating disorder behaviours! Interpersonal inventory Grief, conflict and disputes, transitions Identifying and tolerating emotion and feeling Role play and creative development of interpersonal
skills for getting the best out of relationships and protecting self from destructive patterns of relating
Coping with endings and goodbyes
DBTDBT Linnehan, 1993, Palmer
Intense, irreverent therapeutic relationship, exploitation of the attachment
Individual and group therapies in parallel Focus on not unwittingly reinforcing self-
destructive behaviour Skills: mindfulness, distress tolerance,
emotional regulation, interpersonal skills Chain analysis of painful incidents
DBT for eating disordersDBT for eating disorders Palmer et al 2003 (n=7) fewer days in hospital,
reduced DSH ‘eatingness’ Maltheus, Allen, Reid & Linehan 2008 (n=8) BN
and BED Stanford model of DBT for BN (1RCT) & BED
(2RCTs) – similar results to CBT and IPT trials- Mindful vs mindless eating- Urge surfing vs capitulation- ‘apparently irrelevent behaviours’
Sometimes Sometimes things don't go, after all,
from bad to worse. Some years, muscadel
faces down frost; green thrives; the crops don't fail.
Sometimes a man aims high, and all goes well.
A people sometimes will step back from war,
elect an honest man, decide they care
enough, that they can't leave some stranger poor.
Some men become what they were born for.
Sometimes our best intentions do not go
amiss; sometimes we do as we meant to.
The sun will sometimes melt a field of sorrow
that seemed hard frozen; may it happen for you.
Sheenagh Pugh