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JANUARY / FEBRUARY
2005
AROUND HARVARD
This article originally appeared in
the December 2004 Harvard Mental Health Letter and is provided courtesy
of Harvard
Health Publications.
Paranoia
“…the patient imagines that everything
happening around him is a veiled reference to his personality and existence.
Clouds in the staring sky transmit to one another, by means of slow signs,
incredibly detailed information regarding him. His innermost thoughts
are discussed at nightfall, in manual alphabet, by darkly gesticulating
trees. Pebbles or stains or sun flecks form patterns representing in some
awful way messages which he must interpret. Everything is a cipher and
of everything he is the theme. He must always be on guard and devote every
minute and module of life to the decoding of the undulation of things.”
This strange vision from the fiction of Vladimir Nabokov conveys through exaggeration
and poetic heightening some features of paranoia. The word is derived from
Greek roots meaning something like “mind beside itself,” and the
ancient Greeks used it to refer to almost any mental aberration or bizarre
thinking. Since then, it has been applied to many disorders that involve delusions.
Today it is mainly reserved in official psychiatric terminology for two conditions:
paranoid personality and paranoid schizophrenia.
Mistrust as a personality trait
The identifying mark of paranoid personality is fear (and expectation) of attack
and betrayal. Paranoid personalities are suspicious, touchy, humorless, quick
to take offense and slow to forgive, self-righteous, argumentative, often litigious.
They seldom show tenderness and may avoid intimacy; often they seem tense and
brusque. Paranoid personalities find causal connections everywhere; nothing
is coincidental. They think that others are taking special notice of them and
see references to themselves in innocuous behavior and irrelevant events. They
are constantly on guard, searching for hidden motives and meetings.
Once they fix on an idea or explanation, they look for evidence to validate
their prejudices, and it is almost impossible to change their minds. When something
goes wrong in their lives, they believe that another person is to blame. Some
are arrogant, but others may be secretive because they fear that anything they
say or do will be used against them. That can be a self-fulfilling prophecy
because apparent coldness and arrogance make others uneasy, and mistrust provokes
mistrust. According to the familiar saying, even paranoids have enemies. In
fact, it is especially paranoids who have enemies because their attitudes and
behavior provoke real hostility, further feeding their suspicions.
By the official definition, paranoid personality is rare, occurring in about
1% of the population, but paranoid symptoms are common in other personality
disorders as well. Paranoid personality is usually classified as one of the
odd or eccentric personality disorders, along with schizoid personality (emotional
coldness, lack of close friends) and schizotypal personality (peculiar beliefs,
suspiciousness, and social isolation). Paranoid characteristics are also found
in antisocial personality (belligerence, arrogance, blaming others); in compulsive
personality (small-mindedness, stubbornness, rigidity, and self-righteousness);
and in narcissistic personality (arrogance, self-importance, self-centeredness).
Delusions
Paranoid schizophrenia is identified by prominent delusions or hallucinations
in a person whose reasoning and emotional responses are relatively well preserved.
Some believe it is a distinct type of schizophrenia; others regard it as one
form or stage of an underlying schizophrenic condition that produces different
symptoms at different times. Like paranoid personalities, schizophrenic patients
in a paranoid state are angry, rigid, and argumentative, but unlike paranoid
personalities, they have delusions — false beliefs about external reality
that persist in contradiction to the beliefs of others and despite obvious
and irrefutable evidence to the contrary. They hear abusive and threatening
voices, believe others can read their thoughts, or claim that they are under
the control of mysterious alien powers. Paranoid personality disorder may be
genetically related to schizophrenia, although the evidence is uncertain.
As a symptom, paranoia also occurs in many other psychiatric disorders and
medical illnesses, including mania, psychotic depression, epilepsy, Alzheimer’s
disease, and alcohol intoxication and withdrawal. Abusers of stimulant drugs
may develop symptoms that resemble paranoid personality, and high doses of
stimulants can cause a psychosis that resembles paranoid schizophrenia. When
deafness, isolation, or a degenerative brain condition interferes with their
understanding, older people may begin to suspect that others are whispering
about them, spying on them, or stealing from them.
Paranoia can also be a symptom of an adjustment disorder, especially one that
results from a sudden change in environment. The classic case is the culture
shock experienced by immigrants thrust into an unfamiliar world among strangers
with customs and a language they do not understand.
Delusional disorders are another source of paranoid thinking. These include
somatic delusions (the false belief that you are ill or dying); erotomania
(the false belief that someone is in love with you); grandiose delusions (the
belief that you are a misunderstood saint or genius); and delusions of persecution
(the false belief that you are the object of spying, poisoning, insults, harassment,
or conspiratorial betrayal).
Definition
of paranoid personality disorder
Pervasive distrust and suspicion that cause a person to misinterpret the
motives of others as malevolent. It includes at least four of the following:
A
belief that others are exploiting, harming, or deceiving you.
Preoccupation
with unjustified doubts about the loyalty or trustworthiness of people
around you.
Reluctance
to confide in others for fear of betrayal.
Reading
hidden threats and insults into harmless remarks or events.
Bearing
grudges.
Perceiving
attacks on one’s character or reputation that others do not notice — and
quickly counterattacking.
Unjustified
jealousy.
Adapted from the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Revised. |
The nature of paranoia
Paranoid symptoms arise from many different kinds of intellectual, emotional,
and organic breakdown because they are a byproduct of the human capacity
to find connections, assign meanings, and give reasons. The tendency to mistake
coincidences for causes and blame persons rather than circumstances is universal.
Within limits, everyone has to be on guard against deceit and betrayal. In
everyday speech, the word “paranoid” has partly lost the connotation
of error or delusion. People who describe themselves as paranoid usually
mean they are justifiably fearful and suspicious. Normal vigilance may turn
into genuine paranoia because of external circumstances (the immigrant suffering
culture shock) or organic illness, and some people may simply be congenitally
hypersensitive to signs of hostility.
As an explanation for paranoia without an obvious organic cause, Freud’s
is the best-known theory. He suggested that paranoia is a psychological defense
that arises when repressed childhood impulses reemerge in an adult crisis,
converted into suspicions and delusions by projection — the process of
attributing one’s own unacknowledged wishes to another person. For example,
a man who feels violently angry at someone may deny his own rage but insist
that the other person is going to attack him.
Projection is still considered central to paranoia. Paranoid persons cannot
acknowledge that they feel unworthy, so they say others are criticizing them.
Feeling guilty, they decide that others are making false accusations. Feeling
helpless, they say that others are trying to entrap them. They are constantly
thinking about their alleged persecutors, so the persecutors must be constantly
thinking about them.
Paranoid delusions may develop in a susceptible person because of an accident,
a minor injustice, a misunderstanding, even heightened intimacy or increased
responsibility — any change that causes anxiety. Delusional explanations
provide the comfort of knowing where the threat is coming from and what to
be on guard against.
Treatment
Treating people with paranoid tendencies is difficult. When the paranoia reaches
the level of delusions, antipsychotic medication is useful, although helping
the patient acknowledge the problem can be a challenge. And even with psychopharmacological
treatment, paranoia may persist.
Often, paranoid persons are coping well enough on their own terms, and their
behavior troubles others more than themselves. They dread being dependent on
anyone because they trust no one. They may seek help if projection and other
paranoid defenses fail and they begin to feel depressed and anxious. But even
then, they may go into therapy unwillingly and break it off prematurely. With
a therapist, they tend to be at best irritable and guarded, at worst contemptuous,
hostile, or even threatening.
Therapists who want to maintain a working alliance with a paranoid patient
must avoid becoming the object of projection. They should provide models of
non-paranoid behavior, and not allow themselves to become either an aggressor
or a victim. The therapist must build trust gradually, without trying to be
too friendly, and avoid showing of anger or defensiveness. Complete honesty
is essential because people with paranoid tendencies are highly sensitive to
deception and holding back.
Disputing or otherwise directly confronting paranoid beliefs is ineffective,
and interpretations will be regarded mainly as accusations. Instead, the therapist
must help patients acknowledge the feelings they have been defending themselves
against. Some say depression is a good sign because it suggests that the patient
is abandoning projection and realizes his or her own vulnerability. It helps
to learn the details — what causes the paranoid thoughts, how they make
the patient feel, when and why they come and go. Cognitive behavioral therapy
may reduce sensitivity to criticism by improving social skills or anxiety.
If therapy goes well, projection will gradually subside. Even if the patient
does not eventually reject all suspicious ideas, paranoid feelings may become
less intense and the paranoid thoughts less absorbing, giving way to better
functioning and more comfort.
References
Blaney PH. “Paranoid Conditions,” in Millon T, et al. eds.
Oxford Textbook of Psychopathology. Oxford University Press, 1999.
Green MJ, et al. “Social Threat Perception and the Evolution of Paranoia,” Neuroscience
and Biobehavioral Reviews (2004): Vol. 28, pp. 333–42.
Kendler K. “Delusional Disorders,” in Berrios GE, et al., eds.
A History of Clinical Psychiatry. New York University Press, 1995.
Manschreck TC. “Paranoid Disorders,” in M. Jacobson, ed. Psychiatric
Secrets, Second Edition. Hanley and Belfus, 2001.
Meissner WW. “Paranoid Personality Disorder,” in Gabbard GO,
ed. Treatments of Psychiatric Disorders, Second Edition. American Psychiatric
Press, 1995.
Rector NA, et al. “Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Schizophrenia:
An Empirical Review,” Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease (May
2001): Vol. 189, No. 5, pp. 278 –87. |
Copyright 2006 Harvard Medical International
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