Nightmare experience and personality disorder functioning styles in healthy volunteers and nightmare disorder patients

Bull Menninger Clin. 2020 Summer;84(3):278-294. doi: 10.1521/bumc.2020.84.3.278.

Abstract

Nightmares are prevalent in psychiatric disorders, and personality disorder features might be associated with nightmare experience, especially in nightmare disorder patients. The authors invited 219 healthy volunteers and 118 nightmare disorder patients to undergo tests of the Nightmare Experience Questionnaire (NEQ), the Parker Personality Measure (PERM), and the Plutchik-van Praag Depression Inventory. Compared to healthy volunteers, nightmare disorder patients scored significantly higher on annual nightmare frequency and NEQ Physical Effect, Negative Emotion, Meaning Interpretation, and Horrible Stimulation, and higher on PERM Paranoid, Schizotypal, Borderline, Histrionic, Narcissistic, Avoidant, and Dependent styles. Borderline, Schizotypal, and Passive-Aggressive styles in healthy volunteers and Dependent, Avoidant, Histrionic, and Paranoid in patients were significant predictors of some NEQ scales. Higher annual nightmare frequency, higher scale scores of nightmare experience and personality disorder styles, and more associations between the two were found in nightmare disorder patients, implying the need for personality-adjustment therapy for nightmare disorder.

Keywords: nightmare disorder; nightmare experience; personality disorder functioning styles.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Dreams / physiology*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Parasomnias / etiology
  • Parasomnias / physiopathology*
  • Personality Disorders / complications
  • Personality Disorders / physiopathology*
  • Young Adult