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Journal Article

Citation

McGirr A, Paris J, Lesage A, Renaud J, Turecki G. Can. J. Psychiatry 2009; 54(2): 87-92.

Affiliation

University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario; Graduate Student, McGill Group for Suicide Studies, Douglas Hospital Research Centre, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, Canadian Psychiatric Association, Publisher SAGE Publications)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

19254439

Abstract

Objective: To clarify whether certain Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV), borderline personality disorder (BPD) symptoms are more prevalent among people who die by suicide, and thereby better predict suicide risk. Method: A psychological autopsy method with best informants was used to investigate DSM-IV BPD symptoms and suicide risk among people who died by suicide and met criteria for BPD (n = 62), and BPD control subjects (n = 35). Results: BPD symptoms in people who died by suicide were less likely to include affective instability and paranoid ideation-dissociative symptoms. The negative association between paranoid ideation-dissociative symptoms and suicide was independent of all other BPD symptoms, Cluster B comorbidity, and alcohol dependence. Conclusions: We found that discrete DSM-IV BPD symptoms differentiate people with BPD who die by suicide and those who do not. People with BPD who go on to die by suicide appear to constitute a specific subgroup of those who meet criteria for BPD, characterized by different general clinical presentation, but also by different characteristics within BPD.


Language: en

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