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Journal Article

Citation

Shahar G, Scotti MA, Rudd MD, Joiner TE. Depress. Anxiety 2008; 25(10): 892-898.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel. shaharg@bgu.ac.il

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/da.20363

PMID

17932897

Abstract

Consistent with the "scar hypothesis", according to which mood depression might impact personality, we examined the effect of unipolar and hypomanic mood disturbances on cluster B (i.e., narcissistic, histrionic, and borderline) personality disorder features. Data from 113 suicidal young adults were utilized, and cross-lagged associations between unipolar and hypomanic mood disturbances and cluster B personality disorder features were examined using manifest-variable structural equation modeling (SEM). Hypomanic symptoms predicted an increase in narcissistic and histrionic personality disorder features over the Time 1-Time 2 period, as well as an increase in narcissistic personality disorder features over the Time 1-Time 3 period. Unipolar depressive symptoms and borderline features were reciprocally and longitudinally associated, albeit at different time periods. The sample distinct features restrict generalization of the findings. An exclusive use of self-report measures might have contributed to shared method variance. Results are consistent with the notion that hypomanic symptoms increase narcissistic personality disorder tendencies.


Language: en

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