Taking Wellbutrin. Have Mood Swings, Feeling Abandoned With Behaviour And Decision Making. History Of Sexual Abuse
Thanks for your query.
Important aspects of your query are:
• 35 year old female
• Significant past history of emotional, physical and sexual abuse.
• History of having multiple sexual partner and multiple substance use.
• Received antidepressant like celexa in past and currently on wellbutrin. In therapy for past 3+ years
• Complaints of: swings in mood, behavior & decision making/ Often misreads clearly defined intent of others communications/ difficulty communicating wants, needs, & feelings to others/ very depressed & sad one moment. & angry, aggressive & violence the next/ exaggerates facts of events/ lack of insight for being abuser.
• Current query: regarding diagnosis of her problem.
Your history is well written. You appear to be a medical person, considering quality and detail of your query. It will be easier to make you understand her complex problem.
She appear to suffering from personality disorder, cluster B type, more specifically mixed histrionic and borderline traits. But for final diagnosis regarding personality she requires some of the following tests to assess personality, which is administered by trained psychologist: Sentence completion test, Rorschach Inkblot Test, Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) or Minnesota-Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI).
Personality disorder is also a predisposing factor for other psychiatric disorders (e.g., substance use, suicide, affective disorders, impulse-control disorders, eating disorders, depression and anxiety disorders) in which it interferes with treatment outcomes of other psychiatric disorder and increases personal incapacitation, morbidity, social complication and mortality of these patients. In her case she is having depressive symptoms. There is also need to look for possibility of bipolar disorder in her case, during follow case.
Persons with personality disorders are far more likely to refuse psychiatric help and to deny their problems than persons with anxiety disorders, depressive disorders, or obsessive-compulsive disorder. Personality disorder symptoms are alloplastic (i.e., able to adapt to, and alter, the external environment) and ego-syntonic (i.e., acceptable to the ego). Persons with personality disorders do not feel anxiety about their maladaptive behavior. Because they do not routinely acknowledge pain from what others perceive as their symptoms, they often seem disinterested in treatment and impervious to recovery.
I hope this information has been both informative and helpful for you. In case of any doubt, I will be available for follow ups.
Wish you good health.
Regards,