Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD)
Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a condition marked by intense and unstable emotions, relationships, and self-image, along with impulsivity and fear of abandonment.
Definition
BPD involves pervasive instability in mood, self-image, and relationships, with impulsivity and sensitivity to perceived rejection. Symptoms often emerge in adolescence or early adulthood. It is treatable, particularly with structured therapies. Screening tools like the MSI-BPD and BSL-23 measure symptoms; diagnosis requires clinical assessment.
What it can feel like
- Rapid, intense mood shifts.
- Fear of abandonment and unstable relationships.
- Impulsive or self-damaging behaviors.
- A shifting or unclear sense of self.
Related screening tests on LuriaLab
- Instrumento de Triagem de McLean para Transtorno de Personalidade Borderline (MSI-BPD)
- Lista de Sintomas Borderline (BSL-23)
Related glossary terms
Perguntas frequentes
Is BPD treatable?
Yes. Evidence-based therapies such as DBT can significantly help. Many people improve substantially over time.
What MSI-BPD score suggests further evaluation?
Answering "yes" to 7 or more of the 10 items is the common screening threshold. A clinician confirms any diagnosis.
Sources
- Zanarini MC, et al. MSI-BPD
- NICE — borderline personality disorder guidance
Last reviewed: 2026-07-02. Screening tools on LuriaLab are for education only and do not provide a diagnosis.