A POSSIBLE NEW NAME
FOR BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER

Many people would like to change the
terminology of the borderline personality disorder to a new term that more
accurately describes the illness. The term BPD in and of itself is as if the
whole person (and the personality) is flawed, rather than looking at the BPD as a medical
problem it actually is.
The term borderline personality
disorder implies that there is no hope for treatment as many mental health
professionals unfortunately still believe. There is thought that this illness borders on
schizophrenia, thus the term borderline.
What then is borderline personality
disorder? These questions have been posed to Dr. Leland Heller, expert in treating
borderline personality disorder.
Q. What do you think about the term
"borderline personality disorder"?
A. I think it's a horrible,
insulting label for a real medical illness. The name alone reduces serious research,
stigmatizes victims, and implies the person is crazy. It denies the medical nature of the
process, and implies simply a personality problem.
Q. Do you think borderline
personality disorder is an accurate description?
A. No I don't. It implies a
character problem. While I've encountered many people with a bad character who had the
BPD, most borderlines I've treated (over 2100) do not have character problems.
"Borderline" means patients live "at the border" between psychosis and
reality. When borderlines are well treated medically, psychotic experiences are few and
far between - and can be treated well. Borderlines don't live at that border, they simply
go into psychosis too easily under stress.
Q. What is the BPD?
A. The BPD is a medical problem,
likely a form of epilepsy (brain cells firing inappropriately and out of control). The
characteristic symptoms include inappropriate moodiness, chronic anger, emptiness,
boredom, dysphoria (anxiety, rage, depression and despair) and psychosis. The other
criteria are symptoms related to these medical problems.
ALL neurological disorders can have an
effect on the personality, such as Parkinson's disease which isn't called the
shaking personality disorder. "
Q. What does this term
"Dyslimbia" mean?
Dys means
malfunction, and limbia meaning from the limbic system.
Dyslimbia is malfunction of
the limbic system. While other neuropsychiatric disorders involve malfunction of the
limbic system, the limbic system dysfunction is profound in the BPD. I chose Dyslimbia for
my patients to take the stigma away. The BPD needs a new name, one that emphasizes healing
not labeling.
I dont care if its renamed
Dyslimbia or not, but a more honest, humane, and hopeful name needs to be made
for this illness. Patients deserve to get medical attention for Dyslimbia (or
an equivalent name), rather than have doctors and therapists shun them because they are
borderlines.

