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Poster Presentation
College of Humanities, Arts, & Social Sciences
Byrd, Imani, Carly Kahn, Jessica Kopitz, Xiyu Cao, Heidi Martin, and Emily Dowgwillo. "Differentiating Complex Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms, and Personality Pathology Using the Interpersonal Circumplex." †
Complex posttraumatic stress disorder (cPTSD) includes core post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms plus disturbances in self-organization (DSO), yet debate continues over whether it is sufficiently distinct from existing diagnostic categories to be considered a separate diagnosis. This study examines the interpersonal characteristics of PTSD, cPTSD, borderline personality disorder (BPD), and level of personality functioning (LPFS) using the interpersonal circumplex. A trauma-exposed sample of 554 adults completed measures of PTSD symptoms (PCL-5, ITQ-PTSD), DSO symptoms (ITQ-DSO), personality pathology symptoms (BSL-23 and LPFS) and interpersonal functioning on the problems and values surfaces. Both the PCL-5 and ITQ-PTSD scales demonstrated similar interpersonal profiles, as did DSO and LPFS (but not BPD). PTSD and BPD symptoms were characterized by cold-dominant interpersonal problems, cold values, and high interpersonal distress. DSO and LPFS symptoms, on the other hand, were characterized by cold-submissive problems and cold/cold-submissive values. Moreover, DSO was associated with significantly higher distress than PTSD but lower distress than BPD. Results provide evidence for DSO as a distinct interpersonal construct from PTSD and BPD and indicate that there is substantial overlap in the interpersonal characteristics associated with DSO and LPFS. These findings support the diagnostic validity of a cPTSD category and suggest that dimensional approaches to personality assessment can enhance differential diagnosis and inform trauma-focused interventions.
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