Coocurrencia de trastornos de personalidad en pacientes con trastornos de ansiedad
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/86271ISSN: en linea 0719-0581
ISSN: impreso 0716-8039
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Robles Ortega, Humbelina; Mata Martín, José Luis; Sánchez Barrera, María Blasa; Vera Guerrero, María Nieves; Pegalajar Chica, Joaquín; Mezcua, Andrea; Fernández-Santaella Santiago, Carmen; Vila Castellar, JaimeEditorial
Universidad de Chile
Materia
Coocurrencia Trastornos de ansiedad Trastornos de personalidad
Date
2016-06-07Referencia bibliográfica
Robles-Ortega, H., Mata-Martín, J. L., Sánchez-Barrera, M. B., Vera-Guerrero, M. N., Pegalajar, J., Mezcua, A., ... Vila, J. (2016). Coocurrencia de trastornos de personalidad en pacientes con trastornos de ansiedad. Revista de Psicología, 25(1), 1-17.
Abstract
The co-occurrence between personality
disorders and anxiety disorders may have important
implications. Multiple diagnoses can give
us an idea of the severity of the disorder, functioning
impairment and prognosis. The aim of this
study was two-fold, to analyze the co-occurrence
between personality disorders and anxiety disorders,
and to identify personality disorder profiles
in different anxiety disorders. A total of 31 patients
with anxiety disorders participated in the study.
They were divided into four groups: specific phobia,
social phobia, generalized anxiety and panic
with or without the presence of agoraphobia. The
assessment instruments used were The Millon
Clinical Multiaxial Inventory II and the Anxiety
Disorders Interview according to the fourth edition
of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders. The specific phobia group presented
lower scores on the different scales and lower frequency
of personality disorders. On the contrary,
the generalized anxiety group had a higher rate of
multiple diagnoses of personality disorders.
Higher scores were observed in the schizoid, dependent,
self-defeating, avoidant and compulsive
scales. Each anxiety disorder presented a profile of
personality disorders. Co-occurrence between disorders
may help to understand the success or failure
of a treatment, so the systematic evaluation of
pathological personality in the clinical setting is
recommended.