Article Type: Research Article Article Citation: Simona Trfiu, Elena-Alexandra Neacșa,
Ștefania-Elena Neagoe,
and Andreea-Simina Ojică.
(2021). HISTRIONIC IMMATURE PERSONALITY DISORDER. International Journal of
Research -GRANTHAALAYAH, 9(3), 241-247. https://doi.org/10.29121/granthaalayah.v9.i3.2021.3801 Received Date: 09 March 2021 Accepted Date: 31 March 2021 Keywords: Histrionic
Personality Disorder Dissociative/Conversion
Disorder Immature Personality Sensitivity
Oedipus Complex Background: We aim at presenting a clinical case of a 37-year-old patient, who has been a nun for several years and at the moment can no longer adapt to the environment in which she lives and to the requirements of everyday life. The perspective of this analysis is both a psychiatric one, explaining the diagnosis of Axis II of Histrionic Immature Personality Disorder, but also the overlap with dissociative conversion disorder, and explanatory from a psychodynamic perspective, by addressing the regression issues and the presence of the Oedipus Complex. Histrionic Immature Personality Disorder and its overlap with Dissociative/Conversion Disorder are conditions with negative effects in terms of adaptation to the social environment and assuming professional responsibilities. Also, the particularities in the sphere of immaturity make it difficult to relate to those around. Method: Hospitalization, psychiatric interview, psychodynamic interview, psychological tests - CAQ Personality Questionnaire and the Szondi Test, psychodynamic interpretations. Results: The results highlight aspects of an immature premorbid personality, characterized by a high degree of sensitivity. Currently, the patient's ego is fragile and cannot adapt to the emotional meanings in the environment in which she lives, which leads to functional crises and manifestations such as dissociative fugue. Conclusions: Dissociative manifestations are associated with immaturity and reduced ability to adapt to professional requirements. On a personal level, the same immaturity leads to the denial of one's sexuality and projection.
1. INTRODUCTION1.1. REASONS FOR ADMISSION
The 37-year-old patient was hospitalized because she
passed out whilst she was in a store, an incident that has happened in the past
and which is justified, from her point of view, by the fact that her
relationship with the nuns from the monastery where she was living is a
strained one. Sometime before the patient suffered a psychotic
episode whilst she was on a trip to The Church of the Holy Sepulchre in the
Christian Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem, where she experienced feelings
from the sphere of the dissociative trance and possession disorder - she
fainted, claimed that the Holy Spirit possessed her body and her manner of
speaking indicated that she was communicating with a spiritual entity. Thus, the patient is checked into a psychiatric ward
due to memory loss, instant fainting and suicide
attempts, all of which are contained by the sensitive dimension of her
personality. At the same time, she is not aware of her own
behavioural problems. 1.2. PERSONAL HISTORY
Her education consists of eleven years of school and
she says that she regrets not having had received a higher education, because
she was too afraid to. Prior to hospitalization, she had lived in a monastery
since 2001, her intention was to enter such an institution from her own
initiative, claiming that her wish was not influenced by anyone, ever since
childhood, from the age of 12, but she had to postpone this decision in order to continue her schooling. The patient claims that her mother was physically
assaulted by the patient's grandmother, which determined the patient's mother
to leave home at 18 years old. She gave birth to a daughter shortly after
leaving home (the patient's older sister), but the child was ill and remained
in hospital due to complications, the patient's mother leaving for Bucharest,
where she became pregnant again. When the patient was 13 and a half years old,
her mother received a phone call that informed her that she had to start taking
care of her first daughter, Adriana, who was then 18 years old. At the time of
the interview, the patient claims that her mother's third husband, the current
stepfather, loves both girls and that their family life together had been a
joyful one. There are no reports of the biological father. She has lived in several monasteries, because she
encountered difficulties in terms of integration into the social environment
there, confessing that "she had trials in the monastery, quarrels,
temptations". In 2005 she was involved in a car accident about which
she does not remember certain moments, she was unconscious and underwent
neurosurgery. 1.3. PREMORBID PERSONALITY CHARACTERISTICS
The patient's accentuated sensitivity stands out,
which influences her opinions about the events in her life and the way she
perceives other people’s motivations. In this sense, in connection with the
social environment within the monastery, she says that "envy and pride are
at work". At the same time, she has a very good
opinion about herself and about other peopleʼs
perceptions of her, saying that she is doing very well and that she is
appreciated by Christians for her vocal and housekeeping qualities. Furthermore, her sensitivity is illustrated by her
perception of the doctor who treated her after the car accident, claiming that
she "felt" his harshness. Also, she considers the doctor to be
"heretical" because that's what the women
around him told him. In addition, she claims that the abbess who accompanied
her to the hospital had discussions with the doctor about the patient's
behavioural aspects about which she is dissatisfied, considering the doctor's
attitude influenced by her. Regarding the life in the monastery, the patient
considers herself a victim and is dissatisfied with the fact that she remained
a "sister" in the church hierarchy, which is the lowest position one
can have, having the same status since entering this community in spite of her qualities. Thus, in order
to improve this aspect, the patient seeks to constantly improve in music
and household chores. Also, after the accident, the patient suffered
physical injuries as a result of which she could no
longer maintain the household activities at the monastery, being accused of
pretending to avoid work. 2. MATERIALS AND METHODSThe first method used was hospitalization,
where she was administrated a series of medication to sustain her state of
consciousness. The psychiatric interview, accompanied by the psychodynamic one,
have constructed the overall picture of the patient's state. Furthermore, CAQ
Personality Questionnaire and the Szondi Test have
been used. All of the above evaluations have consisted
of psychodynamic interpretations. Suicide
Attempt - she has had two suicide attempts in the past, the
first time the patient self-administered a teaspoon of caustic soda and the
second time she wanted to jump off rocks, in both cases she says she was
influenced by instant thoughts that seemed bizarre and which she did not have
before the car accident which occurred in 2005, because "she did not agree
with such a thing". She confesses that she had "a little bit of
discernment" because the first time the gesture was not a total one, and
the second time she did not put her thoughts into action, because the fear of
death stopped her. Functional
Crises - feelings of depersonalization and derealization,
the patient loses consciousness when she is in life situations in which she
does not feel comfortable, not being aware of the reasons that generate
dissatisfaction. Memory
Loss - after the accident, the patient began to have
memory loss, especially when she is upset by someone. She claims that during a
telephone conversation she did not know anything about the family she was
talking to for a few minutes, even though they were her acquaintances. At the
same time, she no longer recognized the people she knew, shortly before the
moment of hospitalization. Dissociative
Amnesia - elective, affectogenic
amnesia, the patient forgets moments characterized by an intense negative
emotional tension. Suggestibility
- dissociates easily, is influenced by the emotional
state of the ones surrounding her. Sensitivity
- is easily affected by other people’s reactions, interprets that they are
directed at her. Immaturity
- attachment to a fifth-grade poem and identification
with the character presented, who is a child; the desire to be the centre of
attention, to showcase her talents; non-compliance with the rules of the
monastery under the influence of immature mechanisms. Denial of
one's sexuality and Projection - she has the pleasure of watching
actors, scientists, like a 15-year-old girl who falls in love with the image of
a famous person. She has a fixation on the abbot whom she knows from the
monastery. During the hospitalization caused by the accident, she had an
interaction with another patient, whom she later accused of manifesting
inappropriate sexual behaviours towards her, despite the fact
that she was the one who caused the event. The patient experiences
derived pleasures which are bothering the ones surrounding her. Delusions
of Grandeur - the other nuns "are not like
me", "and the others have a penchant for music, but not like
me", she considers herself to be "the best in the monastery",
she claims that she has the ability to "tell
someone personality by his face", she also presents herself as having a
"special relationship with God". Positive
Diagnosis Considering the above symptoms, it
is argued that the diagnosis of Axis II is Immature Histrionic personality disorder which overlaps with
Conversion disorder. This psychological diagnostic is included
in hysteria concept described by Charcot. This diagnostic is structured on
three fundamental ideas. Firstly, the concept of hysteria as a personality
structure can be observed, the patient being a histrionic woman (she shows
demonstrative suicide attempt, but, in fact, not wanting to harm herself).
Secondly, the neurotic register is remarked through conversion disorder, somatization
disorder or dissociative disorders (multiple personalities, dissociative
amnesia, depersonalization-derealization disorder). Lastly, the pathology can
be described through hysterical psychosis, manifested through mass disorder and
possession. The Immature personality disorder is
included in the category of Other specific personality disorders (F60.8) from ICD-10 The classification of mental and
behavioural disorders. The dedicated section of the disorder mentioned
above does offer neither a conceptualization, nor the specific symptoms of the
Immature personality disorder. Furthermore, this personality disorder is
neither specifically detailed in The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM–V). However, the patient’s immature behaviour
can be linked to the attachment towards a poem from the 5th grade
and her strong identification with the main character presented in it, a
child. Furthermore, the patient
described in this paper is always seeking attention, and she is always willing
to show her talents off. Not least, the influence of the immature mechanism is
also visible in her disobedience of the monastery’s rules. The Histrionic personality disorder
(F60.4) is included in the category of Specific personality disorders (F60) from
ICD-10 The classification of mental and
behavioural disorders. Specific personality disorder can be characterized
by a severe disruption of the behavioural tendencies, including several areas
of the personality, in association with personal and social disruption. Histrionic personality disorder is
characterized by self-dramatization, exaggerated and theatrical expression of
emotions, high suggestibility, the patient is almost always influenced by the
people around her, labile and superficial affectivity, sensation seeking, the
desire to be the centre of attention, always appreciated by the other,
inappropriate behavioural and guise seduction, exaggerated attention to the
physical attraction. Suggestible structures- the patient is easily dissociable,
takes over the emotional state of the entourage. The patient’s behaviour described in this
paper meets the necessary criteria to be included in the category of the
histrionic personality disorder. Thus, her seeking attention desire can be
characterized by two suicide attempts. The woman’s grandeur and validation
tendency can be illustrated by her cognitions about the other nouns around her,
calling them “not like her”. Also, the patient is characterized by a
suggestible structure, being easily influenced: she is easily dissociable,
takes over the emotional state of the entourage and is she affected by other
peoples’ reactions, thinking that they are directed towards her. Conversion disorder (F44), as is described
in ICD-10 The classification of mental
and behavioural disorders represents a partial or total loss of a normal
integration between the memories of the past, identity and sensations awareness
and the control of body movements. The term “conversion“ illustrates that a negative affect, generated by problems and conflicts which the
person could not handle, is transposed into specific symptoms and behaviours. Dissociative disorders are characterised,
according to Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorder (DSM-V), through a fragmentation and/or
discontinuity regarding normal integration of conscience (psychic reflection of
objective reality), memory, identity, emotion, perception, corporal
representation, motor control and behaviour. Dissociative symptoms found in
patient's case are felt in two manners. The first one refers to experiencing
spontaneous bothering events in her conscious state and behaviour. These are
associated with the loss of subjective experience (for example, her second
suicide attempt). The second one is manifested through the inability of
reaching information or controlling mental functions that are, normally,
immediately available for accessing or controlling (for example, forgetting
details about the family she is talking on the phone with). Dissociative
disorders appear frequently in a short period after a trauma, being associated,
in the patient's case, with her car accident. In the case of Conversion disorder, the
patient manifests a series of functional crisis, represented by sudden falls,
fainting, depersonalization feelings and derealization, temporary loss of
memory. These are generated by the life situations the patient finds herself in
and she does not feel comfortable in the context. She does not realise the fact
that she is in disagreement with the particularities
of the surrounding environment. Thereby, the woman described accuses
symptoms that can be included in Dissociative
amnesia (F44.0), disorder which can be described by the loss of the
memories of certain traumatic events, not due to an organic mental disorder, forgetfulness or fatigue, but due to psychiatric causes.
Likewise, forgetfulness is partial and selective, varying between examination
times or from one day to another. The emotional states which are met in the
dissociative amnesia can vary from perplexity, discomfort, to even seeking
attention behaviours. The patient described is usually having loss of memories
characterized by negative emotional tension. According to Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder (DSM-V),
dissociative amnesia is characterised through patient's incapacitation of
rememorising autobiographical information. The amnesia can be localized (for
example, the forgot events from the car crash), selective (for example,
forgetting details regarding the family she was talking on the phone with) or
generalized (for example, the moments in which she forgot the persons she
usually had to know). This can lead to planned or meaningless travels (for
example, the brake away from the monastery). In addition to those presented above, the
patient meets the criteria necessary to be included in the Dissociative fugue state (F44.1), being a facet of dissociative
amnesia, according to the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder (DSM-V). This
includes flight, leaving apparently without a well-established purpose in a
certain place, time in which self-care is maintained. This departure can also
be doubled by a new identity that can last starting from a few days up to
longer periods of time. In the case presented, the patient suffered a psychotic
episode in which she went on a trip to the Holy Sepulchre, a place with a
strong emotional charge, in which she experienced feelings in the sphere of
trance and possession disorder – she fainted, claiming that the Holy Spirit
entered her, her speech indicating that she would communicate with a spiritual
entity. The psychotic episode described above can
be included in the sphere of possession trance disorder (F44.3), a disorder that involves a temporary loss of a sense of
personal identity and full awareness of the environment. In these moments, the
person can act as she is possessed by another personality, spirit, entity.
According to the Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder (DSM-V), dissociative trance
resembles a disorder that is characterised through sudden shrinking or complete
loss of conscience regarding her close surroundings. This manifests through a
complete lack of responsiveness or insensibility regarding surrounding stimuli.
These can be accompanied by minor cases of stereotypical behaviour, transitory paralysis or conscience loss. These particularities are met
in the patient's behaviour while visiting the Holy Sepulchre, where she
manifested states of trance and possession. The patient states that Holy Grail
descended into her, making her able to communicate with the divinity. She was
writhing and she thought she was in other dimension, the whole event lasting
approximately one hour, including all psychic feelings that followed. Personality disorders represent a change
in some personality structures that have been shaped over time and these cannot
be changed by psychological interventions. However, the problematic structures
can be kept under control and guided by adaptive cognitive and behavioural
responses. Thus, the gold standard intervention
in treating personality disorders is represented by psychotherapy, the
supportive and psychodynamic therapy are also being considered some of the most
effective forms (French & Shrestha, 2019). Thereby, our patient can be
recommended several therapy sessions in order to
improve personal and social behaviour. 3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONS3.1. PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATION
Psychological examinations
taken by the patient confirm immaturity and histrionics. The personality
questionnaire CAQ seeks the measurement of normal personality features and the
parameters of clinical factors. Regarding her personality features, the patient
scored maximum (T=10) on the next facets: Conformism, Eccentricity/Extravagance,
Sensitivity, Radicalism, Tension. This shows the features
of her personality and the fact the patient is governed by sensitivity, by
being suggestible and deeply immature at an emotional level. Personality
structures specific to hysteria can be found, through which the patient assumes
the emotional state of the others in order to build
her own ego. By analysing the dimension of the clinical factors, the patient
got the highest score for facet Hypochondria (T=10), followed by Agitation
and Psychopathic Deviation (T=9). This supports the diagnostic of
disorder and dissociative conversion, where the somatization disorders are
active. The dynamics between mental and somatic are encountered, feelings being
experienced in her body rather than her soul. Furthermore, the Szondi test was given to the patient in
order to measure the tension and valence of the compulsions, allowing
the knowledge of deep motivations that represents the basis of behaviour. Thus,
the Sexual Compulsion vector (S) indicates a histrionics symptomatology.
The result points a weak and passive genitality, with abstinence or periodical
frigidity, suggesting a secondary erotism expressed by tactile voluptuousness.
The sexuality is infantile, proving the subordination character of the
erotic-sentimental bonds. Regarding the proximal vector of Surprising
Compulsions (P), the patient can be described through lamentable theatrical
behaviour (whiny). This masks well the situational emotions and the bizarre
sexual tendencies. The Ego Compulsions vector (Sch)
determines a suppressed ego of the patient that impulsively orients herself
with weakly acknowledged actions. The patient possesses the favourable
particularities of interaction with the occupational therapy field. The fourth
vector, Contact Compulsions (C), shows the patients character as
unstable and easily seduced in environmental relations. She manifests an
oriented polyform interest (infantile), being extremely curious. Her
symptomatology spectre integrates the histrionics dimension. 3.2. PSYCHODYNAMIC INTERPRETATIONS
The screen memories
presented by the patient in relation to her family (they were happy, they got
along very well, her stepfather loved her as his own child, he got along
perfectly with her sister who returned to the family in adolescence) highlight
her immaturity, indicating the fact that if there were misunderstandings or
conflicts within the family, the patient would not have been able to become
aware of them, taking refuge in her religious beliefs. Her intention to leave
home at a young age can be understood taking into consideration this
interpretation, intention which can be regarded as a dissociative escape. The patient also had such a
dissociative fugue when she left the monastery where she lived to look for
another monastery to join, a moment when she failed to realize her
dissatisfaction and resolve the possibly existing conflicts with the other
nuns. This behaviour can be taken from her mother. According to reports, she
"ran away" from multiple events that were not in concordance with her
beliefs. Firstly, she ran away from home from the mother that was physically
abusing her, then she ran away from her own child that showed delicate health,
moving to another city. Also, her relational experience, the fact that she had
three marriages, proves the same dissociative behaviour pattern. The patient
unconsciously adopted this mechanism of avoiding responsibilities and events
that are inconsistent with her own conscious. Also, the fact that her
mother left her ill daughter in hospital and then she came back at eighteen
years old causes the patient to run to a monastery to find her place, yielding
her place in favour of her older sister. In the patient's imagination, her
mother can love only one daughter, she considering herself redundant in her
family's hierarchy. In the structure of the
patient's personality, the Oedipus Complex can be found, which could be the
cause of her neuroses and anxieties felt by her. The unfulfilled relationship
with her biological father and replacing him with her mother can provoke in her
subconscious a feeling of frustration and unfulfillment. Oedipus Complex refers
to erotic investments which one child makes with the parent of opposite sex, as
well as hostile impulses towards the parent of the same sex. The purpose of
this process or solving this phallic stage conflict which develops this complex
consists of erasing the investments that exist regarding maternal and paternal
figures, following the process of replacing through identification of the
same-sex parent. During his professional activity, Freud identified two
existential tendencies regarding neurotic people, especially the hostility
towards the same-sex parent and the love for the opposite-sex parent. This
explains why the author got to grouping these manifestations into the same
complex. The simple existence of this complex does not imply developing a pathology, but represents a normal stage in one infant's
psychological development. It is considered a pathology only when an infant's
conflict remains unsolved. In patient's case, this conflict is not unsolved,
causing relational disfunctions with opposite-sex persons. Thus, the patient
states that the abbot is "her best friend", being like a father to
her. This projection is provoked by the deformed image of the father because
the patient did not have a stable model for this family role. According to the
abbot, the patient was obsessed with him, sending him a plethora of
inappropriate messages at night, specific to a woman fixated for a man. The
patient avoids certain events that she took part in. This fixation is not
admitted by the patient, but there exists the interior conflict felt in sexual
regards through her evasion of similar subjects. According to Loewald (1979), this complex contains mechanisms like
regression, introspection and sublimation of possession means characteristic to
sexual compulsion. These forms of self-control vary in correlation with the
development of experience levels and maturity. Given the fact that the patient
is in a stage of immaturity, her inadequate and repressed behaviour is
representing the most developed way in which she can express herself. By
analysing the study made by Loewald (1979), it can be
observed how the assumption or the responsibility affirmation and the authority
of the descendant (which are taken from the ascendants) are provoking guilt in
descendants within the oedipal conflict between generations. Thus, the rivalry
is playing an important role in gaining authority, autonomy and in the
distribution of the feeling of guilt. Therefore, the constant conflict between
the patient and other nuns can be explained through the projection which she
has over the nuns from the monastery. Thus, the patient is projecting her
mother’s profile in her image of the nuns. She develops an unconscious oedipal
conflict between her and the statuses of the other women in monastery, relating
herself to the abbot’s profile. At the time of her departure
from the monastery, the patient claims that Reverend Mother accused her of
going to “men bars”. This projection developed by Reverend Mother over the
patient turned out to be offensive for the latter, and at the same time
illustrating a way the patient is fantasizing about life outside of the
monastery. The patient shows a
behaviour of regression when she is reciting a poem from fifth grade at the
ending of the interview. This might be
interpreted as an immature way of proving herself. The poem is about a
character named “Smarty”. The patient claims that the verse seemed funny and
that she loved it, showing an unconscious relation between the immature way she
perceives herself and the symbolism of the poem. SOURCES OF FUNDINGThis research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors. CONFLICT OF INTERESTThe author have declared that no competing interests exist. ACKNOWLEDGMENTNone. REFERENCES [1] American Psychiatric Association,
DSM-5 Task Force. (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental
disorders: DSM-5™️ (5th ed.). American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc. [2] French, J. H., & Shrestha, S.
(2019). Histrionic personality disorder. In StatPearls
[Internet]. StatPearls Publishing. [3] ICD-10 The classification of
mental and behavioural disorders. (2016), București: Editura Trei. [4] Loewald, H. W. (1979). The Waning of the
Oedipus Complex. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 27(4),
751-775.
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