About Borderline Personality Disorder
Key Highlights
-
Focuses on long-term management and skill-building rather than a cure.Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) is the gold-standard, evidence-based psychotherapy.Treatment is highly personalized, often combining therapy, medication, and support.Aims to reduce self-harm, suicidal behaviors, and improve emotional regulation.Empowers patients with practical skills for distress tolerance and healthier relationships.
Who is this surgery for?
- Diagnosis of Borderline Personality Disorder based on DSM-5 or ICD-10 criteria.
- Presence of intense, unstable interpersonal relationships and fear of abandonment.
- Chronic feelings of emptiness, identity disturbance, or unstable self-image.
- Recurrent suicidal behavior, gestures, threats, or self-mutilating behavior.
- Affective instability due to marked reactivity of mood (e.g., intense episodic dysphoria).
- Difficulty controlling anger or impulsive behaviors (e.g., spending, substance abuse).
How to prepare
- Undergo a comprehensive psychiatric evaluation for an accurate diagnosis.
- Discuss treatment goals, expectations, and commitment to long-term therapy.
- For therapy (like DBT), commit to attending regular individual and group sessions.
- Provide a complete medical and psychiatric history, including current medications.
- Establish a safety plan with the psychiatrist for managing crises or self-harm urges.
- Involve family members or close supports in the treatment planning if appropriate.
Risks & possible complications
- Psychotherapy can initially intensify difficult emotions as painful topics are addressed.
- Medications (like antidepressants or mood stabilizers) carry side effects (nausea, weight gain, sedation).
- Risk of non-adherence to treatment plans, leading to symptom relapse.
- Potential for therapeutic relationship challenges or dependency.
- In rare cases, hospitalization may be required during severe crises for safety.
Recovery & hospital stay
- Recovery is a gradual process measured in months and years, not days.
- Regular attendance in psychotherapy sessions is critical for practicing new skills.
- Medication may need ongoing adjustment by the psychiatrist for optimal effect.
- Developing and using a crisis plan and support network is essential for setbacks.
- Progress is often seen as a reduction in crisis frequency and improved relationship stability.
- Long-term maintenance therapy is common to sustain gains and prevent relapse.
-
Typical hospital stay: Usually outpatient; 7-14 days for acute crisis hospitalization
-
Expected recovery time: Ongoing process; significant improvement often seen in 1-3 years of consistent treatment
Frequently Asked Questions
If you are considering borderline personality disorder in Turkey, these questions and answers can help you make a confident, informed decision.
Top-rated hospitals in Turkey with psychiatry departments and experienced surgeons are ideal for this procedure. Use MediFyr to compare facilities, reviews, and doctor profiles before you decide.
Look at the doctor’s years of experience, hospital association, patient reviews, and how often they perform borderline personality disorder. MediFyr helps you compare psychiatry specialists and book consultations online.
The overall cost depends on hospital category, surgeon’s experience, room type, implant or device used (if any), length of stay, tests, and post-operative care. Our team can help you get cost estimates from multiple hospitals before you decide.
Procedure cost in other countries
Here is an overview of how the estimated cost, hospital stay, and recovery time for borderline personality disorder compare across other countries where we have data.
| Country | Estimated cost range | Typical stay | Recovery time | View details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| India | USD 16 – USD 54 | Usually outpatient; 7-14 days for acute crisis hospitalization | ~ Ongoing process; significant improvement often seen in 1-3 years of consistent treatment | Know More |
| Turkey | USD 121 – USD 403 | Usually outpatient; 7-14 days for acute crisis hospitalization | ~ Ongoing process; significant improvement often seen in 1-3 years of consistent treatment | Know More |
As a 72-year-old retired classical dancer...
As a 72-year-old retired classical dancer with treatment-resistant depression, I'd lost all joy in life until Dr. Kurinjinathan introduced me to novel neuromodulation therapy. His integration of movement therapy with medication completely transformed my recovery, I'm now teaching dance to seniors with mental health challenges.