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'''Narcissistic personality disorder''' ('''NPD''') is a [[personality disorder]] characterized by a life-long pattern of [[grandiosity|exaggerated feelings of self-importance]], an excessive need for [[admiration]], a diminished ability or unwillingness to [[empathy|empathize]] with others' feelings, and interpersonally exploitative [[behavior]]. Narcissistic personality disorder is one of the sub-types of the broader category known as personality disorders.<ref name=Cal2015/><ref name=DSM5/> It is often [[Comorbidity|comorbid]] with other [[mental disorder]]s and associated with significant functional impairment and [[psychosocial]] disability.<ref name="Cal2015" />
'''Narcissistic personality disorder''' ('''NPD''') is a [[personality disorder]] characterized by a life-long pattern of [[grandiosity|exaggerated feelings of self-importance]], an excessive need for [[admiration]], a diminished ability or unwillingness to [[empathy|empathize]] with others' feelings, and interpersonally exploitative [[behavior]]. Narcissistic personality disorder is one of the sub-types of the broader category known as personality disorders.<ref name=Cal2015/><ref name=DSM5/> It is often [[Comorbidity|comorbid]] with other [[mental disorder]]s and associated with significant functional impairment and [[psychosocial]] disability.<ref name="Cal2015" />


Personality disorders are a class of [[mental disorder]]s characterized by enduring and inflexible [[maladaptive]] patterns of behavior, cognition, and inner experience, exhibited across many contexts and deviating from those accepted by any culture. These patterns develop by early adulthood, and are associated with significant distress or impairment.<ref name="DSM-5-general personality disorder">{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-JivBAAAQBAJ|title=Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders|publisher=[[American Psychiatric Association]]|year=2013|isbn=978-0-89042-555-8|edition=Fifth|location=Arlington, Virginia|pages=646–49}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|first=Germán Elías|last=Berríos|authorlink=Germán Elías Berríos|year=1993|title= European views on personality disorders: a conceptual history|journal=[[Comprehensive Psychiatry]]|publisher=W.B. Saunders Ltd|location=Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|volume= 34|pages= 14–30|doi=10.1016/0010-440X(93)90031-X|pmid=8425387|issue=1}}</ref><ref name="Millon1">{{cite book|title=Disorders of Personality: DSM-IV and Beyond|last=Theodore Millon|author2=Roger D. Davis|publisher=[[Wiley (publisher)|John Wiley & Sons, Inc.]]|year=1996|isbn=978-0-471-01186-6|location=New York City|page=226|author-link=Theodore Millon}}</ref> Criteria for diagnosing personality disorders are listed in the sixth chapter of the ''[[International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems|International Classification of Diseases]]'' (ICD) and in the [[American Psychiatric Association]]'s ''[[Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders]]'' (DSM).
Personality disorders are a class of [[mental disorder]]s characterized by enduring and inflexible [[maladaptive]] patterns of behavior, cognition, and inner experience, exhibited across many contexts and deviating from those accepted by any culture. These patterns develop by early adulthood, and are associated with significant distress or impairment.<ref name="DSM-5-general personality disorder">{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-JivBAAAQBAJ|title=Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders|publisher=[[American Psychiatric Association]]|year=2013|isbn=978-0-89042-555-8|edition=Fifth|location=Arlington, Virginia|pages=646–49}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Berrios GE | title = European views on personality disorders: a conceptual history | journal = Comprehensive Psychiatry | volume = 34 | issue = 1 | pages = 14–30 | year = 1993 | pmid = 8425387 | doi = 10.1016/0010-440X(93)90031-X | publisher = W.B. Saunders Ltd | authorlink = Germán Elías Berríos }}</ref><ref name="Millon1">{{cite book|title=Disorders of Personality: DSM-IV and Beyond| vauthors = Millon T, Davis RD |publisher=[[Wiley (publisher)|John Wiley & Sons, Inc.]]|year=1996|isbn=978-0-471-01186-6|location=New York City|page=226|author-link=Theodore Millon}}</ref> Criteria for diagnosing personality disorders are listed in the sixth chapter of the ''[[International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems|International Classification of Diseases]]'' (ICD) and in the [[American Psychiatric Association]]'s ''[[Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders]]'' (DSM).


There is no standard treatment for NPD.<ref name=":0">{{Citation |last1=Mitra |first1=Paroma |title=Narcissistic Personality Disorder |date=2022 |url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK556001/ |work=StatPearls |location=Treasure Island, Florida|publisher=StatPearls Publishing |pmid=32310461 |access-date=2022-05-01 |last2=Fluyau |first2=Dimy}}</ref><ref name=":5">{{Cite journal |last1=King |first1=Ross M. |last2=Grenyer |first2=Brin F.S. |last3=Gurtman |first3=Clint G. |last4=Younan |first4=Rita |date=March 1, 2020 |title=A clinician's quick guide to evidence‐based approaches: Narcissistic personality disorder |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cp.12214 |journal=[[Clinical Psychologist]]|publisher=[[Australian Psychological Society]]|location=Melbourne, Australia|volume=24 |issue=1 |pages=91–95 |doi=10.1111/cp.12214 |hdl=10536/DRO/DU:30136767 |s2cid=216198008 |issn=1328-4207|hdl-access=free }}</ref> Its high comorbidity with other mental disorders influences treatment choice and outcomes.<ref name=":0" /> [[Psychotherapy|Psychotherapeutic]] treatments generally fall into two categories: [[Psychoanalysis|psychoanalytic]]/[[Psychodynamic psychotherapy|psychodynamic]] and [[cognitive behavioral therapy]], with growing support for integration of both in therapy.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal |last=Yakeley |first=Jessica |date=July 5, 2018 |title=Current understanding of narcissism and narcissistic personality disorder |journal=BJPsych Advances |volume=24 |issue=5 |pages=305–315 |doi=10.1192/bja.2018.20 |s2cid=148566892 |issn=2056-4678|doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name=":4">{{Cite journal |last1=Weinberg |first1=Igor |last2=Ronningstam |first2=Elsa |date=March 2020 |title=Dos and Don'ts in Treatments of Patients With Narcissistic Personality Disorder |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1521/pedi.2020.34.supp.122 |journal=[[Journal of Personality Disorders]] |publisher=[[Guilford Press]]|location=New York City|volume=34 |issue=Supplement |pages=122–142 |doi=10.1521/pedi.2020.34.supp.122 |pmid=32186986 |s2cid=214583609 |issn=0885-579X}}</ref> However, there is an almost complete lack of studies determining the effectiveness of treatments.<ref name=":5" />
There is no standard treatment for NPD.<ref name=":0">{{cite journal | vauthors = | title = Narcissistic Personality Disorder | date = 2022 | pmid = 32310461 | url = http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK556001/ | access-date = 2022-05-01 | publisher = StatPearls Publishing | work = StatPearls }}</ref><ref name=":5">{{Cite journal | vauthors = King RM, Grenyer BF, Gurtman CG, Younan R |date=March 1, 2020 |title=A clinician's quick guide to evidence‐based approaches: Narcissistic personality disorder |journal=[[Clinical Psychologist]]|publisher=[[Australian Psychological Society]]|location=Melbourne, Australia|volume=24 |issue=1 |pages=91–95 |doi=10.1111/cp.12214 |hdl=10536/DRO/DU:30136767 |s2cid=216198008 |issn=1328-4207|hdl-access=free }}</ref> Its high comorbidity with other mental disorders influences treatment choice and outcomes.<ref name=":0" /> [[Psychotherapy|Psychotherapeutic]] treatments generally fall into two categories: [[Psychoanalysis|psychoanalytic]]/[[Psychodynamic psychotherapy|psychodynamic]] and [[cognitive behavioral therapy]], with growing support for integration of both in therapy.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal | vauthors = Yakeley J |date=July 5, 2018 |title=Current understanding of narcissism and narcissistic personality disorder |journal=BJPsych Advances |volume=24 |issue=5 |pages=305–315 |doi=10.1192/bja.2018.20 |s2cid=148566892 |issn=2056-4678|doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name=":4">{{cite journal | vauthors = Weinberg I, Ronningstam E | title = Dos and Don'ts in Treatments of Patients With Narcissistic Personality Disorder | journal = Journal of Personality Disorders | volume = 34 | issue = Suppl | pages = 122–142 | date = March 2020 | pmid = 32186986 | doi = 10.1521/pedi.2020.34.supp.122 | publisher = [[Guilford Press]] | s2cid = 214583609 }}</ref> However, there is an almost complete lack of studies determining the effectiveness of treatments.<ref name=":5" />


== Signs and symptoms ==
== Signs and symptoms ==
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=== ICD-11 and ICD-10 ===
=== ICD-11 and ICD-10 ===
{{See also|Personality disorder#ICD-11}}
{{See also|Personality disorder#ICD-11}}
In the [[ICD-11|''International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems'', 11th Edition]] ICD-11 of the [[World Health Organization]] (WHO), all personality disorders are diagnosed under a single title called "personality disorder". The criteria for diagnosis are mainly concerned with assessing dysfunction, distress and maladaptive behavior. Once a diagnosis has been made, the clinician then can draw upon five trait domains to describe the particular causes of dysfunction, as these have major implications for potential treatments.<ref name=":8">Bach, B., & First, M. B. (2018). Application of the ICD-11 classification of personality disorders. ''BMC psychiatry'', ''18'', 1-14.</ref> NPD, as it currently conceptualised, would correspond more or less entirely to the ICD-11 trait of Dissociality, which includes self-centredness (grandiosity, attention-seeking, entitlement and egocentricity) and lack of empathy (callousness, ruthlessness, manipulativeness, interpersonal exploitativeness, and hostility).<ref name=":8" /><ref>Bach, B., Kramer, U., Doering, S., di Giacomo, E., Hutsebaut, J., Kaera, A., ... & Renneberg, B. (2022). The ICD-11 classification of personality disorders: a European perspective on challenges and opportunities. ''Borderline Personality Disorder and Emotion Dysregulation'', ''9''(1), 1-11.</ref>
In the [[ICD-11|''International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems'', 11th Edition]] ICD-11 of the [[World Health Organization]] (WHO), all personality disorders are diagnosed under a single title called "personality disorder". The criteria for diagnosis are mainly concerned with assessing dysfunction, distress and maladaptive behavior. Once a diagnosis has been made, the clinician then can draw upon five trait domains to describe the particular causes of dysfunction, as these have major implications for potential treatments.<ref name="Bach_2018">{{cite journal | vauthors = Bach B, First MB | title = Application of the ICD-11 classification of personality disorders | journal = BMC Psychiatry | volume = 18 | issue = 1 | pages = 351 | date = October 2018 | pmid = 30373564 | pmc = 6206910 | doi = 10.1186/s12888-018-1908-3 | url = }}</ref> NPD, as it currently conceptualised, would correspond more or less entirely to the ICD-11 trait of Dissociality, which includes self-centredness (grandiosity, attention-seeking, entitlement and egocentricity) and lack of empathy (callousness, ruthlessness, manipulativeness, interpersonal exploitativeness, and hostility).<ref name="Bach_2018" /><ref name="pmid35361271">{{cite journal | vauthors = Bach B, Kramer U, Doering S, di Giacomo E, Hutsebaut J, Kaera A, De Panfilis C, Schmahl C, Swales M, Taubner S, Renneberg B | display-authors = 6 | title = The ICD-11 classification of personality disorders: a European perspective on challenges and opportunities | journal = Borderline Personality Disorder and Emotion Dysregulation | volume = 9 | issue = 1 | pages = 12 | date = April 2022 | pmid = 35361271 | pmc = 8973542 | doi = 10.1186/s40479-022-00182-0 }}</ref>


In the previous edition, the [[ICD-10]], narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) is listed under the category of "other specific personality disorders", meaning the ICD-10 required that cases otherwise described as NPD in the DSM-5 would only need to meet a general set of diagnostic criteria.<ref>WHO (2010) [http://apps.who.int/classifications/icd10/browse/2010/en#/F60 ICD-10: Specific Personality Disorders]</ref>
In the previous edition, the [[ICD-10]], narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) is listed under the category of "other specific personality disorders", meaning the ICD-10 required that cases otherwise described as NPD in the DSM-5 would only need to meet a general set of diagnostic criteria.<ref>WHO (2010) [http://apps.who.int/classifications/icd10/browse/2010/en#/F60 ICD-10: Specific Personality Disorders]</ref>


=== Associated features ===
=== Associated features ===
People with NPD exaggerate their skills, accomplishments, and their degree of intimacy with people they consider high-status. A sense of personal superiority may lead them to monopolize conversations, look down on others<ref name="mayo1">{{cite web |date=18 November 2017 |title=Narcissistic personality disorder – Symptoms & causes |url=https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/narcissistic-personality-disorder/symptoms-causes/syc-20366662 |access-date=28 June 2018 |website=[[Mayo Clinic]] |publisher=Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research |location=Phoenix, Arizona}}</ref> or to become impatient and disdainful when other persons talk about themselves.<ref name=DSM5/> This behavior correlates to an overall worse functioning in areas of life like work and intimate romantic relationships.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Gewirtz-Meydan|first1=Ateret|last2=Finzi-Dottan|first2=Ricky|date=April 3, 2018|title=Narcissism and Relationship Satisfaction from a Dyadic Perspective: The Mediating Role of Psychological Aggression|url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01494929.2017.1359814|journal=Marriage & Family Review|language=en|volume=54|issue=3|pages=296–312|doi=10.1080/01494929.2017.1359814|s2cid=148631814|issn=0149-4929}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Cramer|first=Phebe|date=October 2010|title=Narcissism through the ages: What happens when narcissists grow older?|url=https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S009265661100095X|journal=Journal of Research in Personality|language=en|volume=45|issue=5|pages=479–92|doi=10.1016/j.jrp.2011.06.003}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Mathieu|first=Cynthia|date=October 2013|title=Personality and job satisfaction: The role of narcissism|url=https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0191886913002298|journal=Personality and Individual Differences|language=en|volume=55|issue=6|pages=650–54|doi=10.1016/j.paid.2013.05.012}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Ellison|first1=William D.|last2=Acuff|first2=M. Chase|last3=Kealy|first3=David|last4=Joyce|first4=Anthony S.|last5=Ogrodniczuk|first5=John S.|date=September 2020|title=Narcissism and Quality of Life: The Mediating Role of Relationship Patterns|url=https://dx.doi.org/10.1097/NMD.0000000000001170|journal=[[Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease]]|publisher=[[Lippincott Williams & Wilkins]]|location=Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|language=en|volume=208|issue=8|pages=613–18|doi=10.1097/NMD.0000000000001170|pmid=32229790|s2cid=213949270|issn=1539-736X}}</ref>
People with NPD exaggerate their skills, accomplishments, and their degree of intimacy with people they consider high-status. A sense of personal superiority may lead them to monopolize conversations, look down on others<ref name="mayo1">{{cite web |date=18 November 2017 |title=Narcissistic personality disorder – Symptoms & causes |url=https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/narcissistic-personality-disorder/symptoms-causes/syc-20366662 |access-date=28 June 2018 |website=[[Mayo Clinic]] |publisher=Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research |location=Phoenix, Arizona}}</ref> or to become impatient and disdainful when other persons talk about themselves.<ref name=DSM5/> This behavior correlates to an overall worse functioning in areas of life like work and intimate romantic relationships.<ref>{{Cite journal| vauthors = Gewirtz-Meydan A, Finzi-Dottan R |date=April 3, 2018|title=Narcissism and Relationship Satisfaction from a Dyadic Perspective: The Mediating Role of Psychological Aggression |journal=Marriage & Family Review|language=en|volume=54|issue=3|pages=296–312|doi=10.1080/01494929.2017.1359814|s2cid=148631814|issn=0149-4929}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal| vauthors = Cramer P |date=October 2010|title=Narcissism through the ages: What happens when narcissists grow older? |journal=Journal of Research in Personality|language=en|volume=45|issue=5|pages=479–92|doi=10.1016/j.jrp.2011.06.003}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal| vauthors = Mathieu C |date=October 2013|title=Personality and job satisfaction: The role of narcissism |journal=Personality and Individual Differences|language=en|volume=55|issue=6|pages=650–54|doi=10.1016/j.paid.2013.05.012}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Ellison WD, Acuff MC, Kealy D, Joyce AS, Ogrodniczuk JS | title = Narcissism and Quality of Life: The Mediating Role of Relationship Patterns | journal = The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | volume = 208 | issue = 8 | pages = 613–618 | date = August 2020 | pmid = 32229790 | doi = 10.1097/NMD.0000000000001170 | publisher = [[Lippincott Williams & Wilkins]] | s2cid = 213949270 }}</ref>


People with NPD have been observed to use [[psychosocial]] strategies, such as the tendency to devalue and derogate and to insult and blame other people, usually with anger and hostility towards people's responses to their [[Anti-social behaviour|anti-social]] behavior.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Ronningstam|first=Elsa|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/61329826|title=Identifying and understanding the narcissistic personality|date=2005|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|isbn=978-0198033967|location=New York City|pages=22–27|oclc=61329826}}</ref> Narcissistic personalities are more likely to respond with anger or aggressiveness when presented with rejection.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Ellison |first1=William D. |last2=Acuff |first2=M. Chase |last3=Kealy |first3=David |last4=Joyce |first4=Anthony S. |last5=Ogrodniczuk |first5=John S. |date=March 31, 2020 |title=Narcissism and Quality of Life |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/nmd.0000000000001170 |journal=[[Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease]] |publisher=[[Lippincott Williams & Wilkins]]|location=Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|volume=208 |issue=8 |pages=613–618 |doi=10.1097/nmd.0000000000001170 |pmid=32229790 |s2cid=213949270 |issn=1539-736X}}</ref><ref>Gewirtz-Meydan A, Finzi-Dottan R (2018) "Narcissism and relationship satisfaction from a dyadic perspective: The mediating role of psychological aggression". ''Marriage Fam Rev.'' 54:296–312.</ref><ref>Barry CT, Kauten RL (2014) "Nonpathological and pathological narcissism: Which self-reported characteristics are most problematic in adolescents?" ''J Pers Assess.'' 96:212–19</ref> Some patients with NPD (see Subtypes) respond to (real or imagined) criticism or defeat with prone to feelings of [[shame]], humiliation, and worthlessness,<ref name="mayo1" /> and usually mask such feelings from people, by feigning humility, responding with outbursts of rage and defiance, or seeking revenge.<ref name="DSM5" /><ref name="ronningstam2016">{{cite journal|last=Ronningstam|first=Elsa|year=2016|title=New Insights into Narcissistic Personality Disorder|url=http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/special-reports/new-insights-narcissistic-personality-disorder|journal=[[Psychiatric Times]]|publisher=MJH Associates|location=New York City|volume=33|issue=2|page=11}}</ref>
People with NPD have been observed to use [[psychosocial]] strategies, such as the tendency to devalue and derogate and to insult and blame other people, usually with anger and hostility towards people's responses to their [[Anti-social behaviour|anti-social]] behavior.<ref>{{Cite book| vauthors = Ronningstam E |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/61329826|title=Identifying and understanding the narcissistic personality|date=2005|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|isbn=978-0198033967|location=New York City|pages=22–27|oclc=61329826}}</ref> Narcissistic personalities are more likely to respond with anger or aggressiveness when presented with rejection.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Ellison WD, Acuff MC, Kealy D, Joyce AS, Ogrodniczuk JS | title = Narcissism and Quality of Life: The Mediating Role of Relationship Patterns | journal = The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | volume = 208 | issue = 8 | pages = 613–618 | date = August 2020 | pmid = 32229790 | doi = 10.1097/nmd.0000000000001170 | publisher = [[Lippincott Williams & Wilkins]] | s2cid = 213949270 }}</ref><ref>Gewirtz-Meydan A, Finzi-Dottan R (2018) "Narcissism and relationship satisfaction from a dyadic perspective: The mediating role of psychological aggression". ''Marriage Fam Rev.'' 54:296–312.</ref><ref>Barry CT, Kauten RL (2014) "Nonpathological and pathological narcissism: Which self-reported characteristics are most problematic in adolescents?" ''J Pers Assess.'' 96:212–19</ref> Some patients with NPD (see Subtypes) respond to (real or imagined) criticism or defeat with prone to feelings of [[shame]], humiliation, and worthlessness,<ref name="mayo1" /> and usually mask such feelings from people, by feigning humility, responding with outbursts of rage and defiance, or seeking revenge.<ref name="DSM5" /><ref name="ronningstam2016">{{cite journal| vauthors = Ronningstam E |year=2016|title=New Insights into Narcissistic Personality Disorder|url=http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/special-reports/new-insights-narcissistic-personality-disorder|journal=[[Psychiatric Times]]|publisher=MJH Associates|location=New York City|volume=33|issue=2|page=11}}</ref>


The DSM-5 indicates that: "Many highly successful individuals display personality traits that might be considered narcissistic. Only when these traits are inflexible, maladaptive, and persisting, and cause significant functional impairment or subjective distress, do they constitute narcissistic personality disorder."<ref name="DSM5" /> Given the high-function sociability associated with [[narcissism]], some people with NPD might not view such a diagnosis as a functional impairment to their lives.<ref name="ronningstam" /> Although overconfidence tends to make people with NPD very ambitious, such a mindset does not necessarily lead to professional high achievement and success, because they refuse to take risks, in order to avoid failure or the appearance of failure.<ref name="DSM5" /><ref name="ronningstam2016" /> Moreover, the psychological inability to tolerate disagreement, contradiction, and criticism, makes it difficult for persons with NPD to work cooperatively or to maintain long-term, professional relationships with superiors and colleagues.<ref name="gol2">{{Cite book|last=Golomb|first=Elan|url=|title=Trapped in the Mirror: Adult Children of Narcissists in Their Struggle For Self|date=1992|publisher=W. W. Morrow|location=New York |isbn=0688094716|edition=1st|oclc=23143624}}{{page needed|date=September 2021}}</ref>
The DSM-5 indicates that: "Many highly successful individuals display personality traits that might be considered narcissistic. Only when these traits are inflexible, maladaptive, and persisting, and cause significant functional impairment or subjective distress, do they constitute narcissistic personality disorder."<ref name="DSM5" /> Given the high-function sociability associated with [[narcissism]], some people with NPD might not view such a diagnosis as a functional impairment to their lives.<ref name="ronningstam" /> Although overconfidence tends to make people with NPD very ambitious, such a mindset does not necessarily lead to professional high achievement and success, because they refuse to take risks, in order to avoid failure or the appearance of failure.<ref name="DSM5" /><ref name="ronningstam2016" /> Moreover, the psychological inability to tolerate disagreement, contradiction, and criticism, makes it difficult for persons with NPD to work cooperatively or to maintain long-term, professional relationships with superiors and colleagues.<ref name="gol2">{{Cite book| vauthors = Golomb E |title=Trapped in the Mirror: Adult Children of Narcissists in Their Struggle For Self|date=1992|publisher=W. W. Morrow|location=New York |isbn=0688094716|edition=1st|oclc=23143624}}{{page needed|date=September 2021}}</ref>


=== Differential diagnosis ===
=== Differential diagnosis ===
The occurrence of narcissistic personality disorder presents a high rate of [[comorbidity]] with other mental disorders.<ref name="Paris">{{Cite journal |last=Paris |first=Joel |date=April 2014 |title=Modernity and narcissistic personality disorder |url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22800179 |journal=Personality Disorders |volume=5 |issue=2 |pages=220–26 |doi=10.1037/a0028580 |issn=1949-2723 |pmid=22800179}}</ref> People with a fragile variant of NPD (see Subtypes) are prone to bouts of [[psychological depression]], often to the degree that meets the clinical criteria for a co-occurring [[depressive disorder]].<ref name="medline">{{citation |title=Narcissistic personality disorder |date=8 July 2018 |url=https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/000934.htm |website=MedlinePlus |publisher=U.S. National Library of Medicine}}</ref> NPD is associated with the occurrence of [[bipolar disorder]] and [[substance use disorders]],<ref name="Cal2015" /><ref name="ronningstam2016" /> especially [[cocaine use disorder]].<ref name="DSM5" /> NPD may also be comorbid or differentiated with the occurrence of other mental disorders, including [[histrionic personality disorder]], [[borderline personality disorder]], [[antisocial personality disorder]], or [[paranoid personality disorder]].<ref name="DSM5" /> NPD should also be differentiated from [[mania]] and [[hypomania]] as these cases can also present with grandiosity, but present with different levels of functional impairment.<ref name="DSM5" /> It is common for children and adolescents to display personality traits that resemble NPD, but such occurrences are usually transient, and register below the clinical criteria for a formal diagnosis of NPD.<ref name="mayo1" />
The occurrence of narcissistic personality disorder presents a high rate of [[comorbidity]] with other mental disorders.<ref name="Paris">{{cite journal | vauthors = Paris J | title = Modernity and narcissistic personality disorder | journal = Personality Disorders | volume = 5 | issue = 2 | pages = 220–226 | date = April 2014 | pmid = 22800179 | doi = 10.1037/a0028580 }}</ref> People with a fragile variant of NPD (see Subtypes) are prone to bouts of [[psychological depression]], often to the degree that meets the clinical criteria for a co-occurring [[depressive disorder]].<ref name="medline">{{citation |title=Narcissistic personality disorder |date=8 July 2018 |url=https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/000934.htm |website=MedlinePlus |publisher=U.S. National Library of Medicine}}</ref> NPD is associated with the occurrence of [[bipolar disorder]] and [[substance use disorders]],<ref name="Cal2015" /><ref name="ronningstam2016" /> especially [[cocaine use disorder]].<ref name="DSM5" /> NPD may also be comorbid or differentiated with the occurrence of other mental disorders, including [[histrionic personality disorder]], [[borderline personality disorder]], [[antisocial personality disorder]], or [[paranoid personality disorder]].<ref name="DSM5" /> NPD should also be differentiated from [[mania]] and [[hypomania]] as these cases can also present with grandiosity, but present with different levels of functional impairment.<ref name="DSM5" /> It is common for children and adolescents to display personality traits that resemble NPD, but such occurrences are usually transient, and register below the clinical criteria for a formal diagnosis of NPD.<ref name="mayo1" />


==Subtypes==
==Subtypes==
Although the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for NPD has been viewed as homogeneous, there are a variety of subtypes used for classification of NPD.<ref name="Cal2015" /><ref name="Levy">{{cite journal |last1=Levy |first1=Kenneth N |title=Subtypes, dimensions, levels, and mental states in narcissism and narcissistic personality disorder |journal=Journal of Clinical Psychology |date=August 2012 |volume=68 |issue=8 |pages=886–97 |doi=10.1002/jclp.21893 |pmid=22740389 |url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22740389/}}</ref><ref name=":2">{{cite journal |last1=Sedikides |first1=Constantine |date=2021 |title=In Search of Narcissus |url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1364661320302710 |journal=Trends in Cognitive Sciences |volume=25 |issue=1 |pages=67–80 |doi=10.1016/j.tics.2020.10.010 |pmid=33229145 |s2cid=227063824}}</ref> There is poor consensus on how many subtypes exist, but there is broad acceptance that there are at least two: grandiose or overt narcissism, and vulnerable or covert narcissism.<ref name=":1" /><ref name="Levy" /> However, none of the subtypes of NPD are recognized in the DSM-5 or in the ICD-11.
Although the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for NPD has been viewed as homogeneous, there are a variety of subtypes used for classification of NPD.<ref name="Cal2015" /><ref name="Levy">{{cite journal | vauthors = Levy KN | title = Subtypes, dimensions, levels, and mental states in narcissism and narcissistic personality disorder | journal = Journal of Clinical Psychology | volume = 68 | issue = 8 | pages = 886–897 | date = August 2012 | pmid = 22740389 | doi = 10.1002/jclp.21893 }}</ref><ref name=":2">{{cite journal | vauthors = Sedikides C | title = In Search of Narcissus | journal = Trends in Cognitive Sciences | volume = 25 | issue = 1 | pages = 67–80 | date = January 2021 | pmid = 33229145 | doi = 10.1016/j.tics.2020.10.010 | s2cid = 227063824 }}</ref> There is poor consensus on how many subtypes exist, but there is broad acceptance that there are at least two: grandiose or overt narcissism, and vulnerable or covert narcissism.<ref name=":1" /><ref name="Levy" /> However, none of the subtypes of NPD are recognized in the DSM-5 or in the ICD-11.


=== Empirically-verified subtypes ===
=== Empirically-verified subtypes ===
Some research has indicated the existence of three subtypes of NPD,<ref name=":3">{{Cite journal |last1=Russ |first1=Eric |last2=Shedler |first2=Jonathan |last3=Bradley |first3=Rebekah |last4=Westen |first4=Drew |date=November 2008 |title=Refining the Construct of Narcissistic Personality Disorder: Diagnostic Criteria and Subtypes |url=http://psychiatryonline.org/doi/abs/10.1176/appi.ajp.2008.07030376 |journal=American Journal of Psychiatry |language=en |volume=165 |issue=11 |pages=1473–1481 |doi=10.1176/appi.ajp.2008.07030376 |pmid=18708489 |issn=0002-953X}}</ref> which can be distinguished by symptom criteria, comorbidity and other clinical criteria. These are as follows:
Some research has indicated the existence of three subtypes of NPD,<ref name=":3">{{cite journal | vauthors = Russ E, Shedler J, Bradley R, Westen D | title = Refining the construct of narcissistic personality disorder: diagnostic criteria and subtypes | journal = The American Journal of Psychiatry | volume = 165 | issue = 11 | pages = 1473–1481 | date = November 2008 | pmid = 18708489 | doi = 10.1176/appi.ajp.2008.07030376 }}</ref> which can be distinguished by symptom criteria, comorbidity and other clinical criteria. These are as follows:


'''Grandiose/Malignant''': the group exhibits [[grandiosity]], entitlement, interpersonal exploitativeness and manipulation, pursuit of power and control, lack of empathy and remorse, and marked irritability and hostility. This group was noted for high levels of comorbid [[Antisocial personality disorder|antisocial]] and [[Paranoid personality disorder|paranoid]] personality disorders, [[substance abuse]], [[Externalizing disorder|externalizing]], unemployment and greater likelihood of violence.<ref name=":3" /><ref name=":7">{{Cite journal |last1=Tanzilli |first1=Annalisa |last2=Gualco |first2=Ivan |date=March 2020 |title=Clinician Emotional Responses and Therapeutic Alliance When Treating Adolescent Patients With Narcissistic Personality Disorder Subtypes: A Clinically Meaningful Empirical Investigation |url=https://guilfordjournals.com/doi/10.1521/pedi.2020.34.supp.42 |journal=Journal of Personality Disorders |language=en |volume=34 |issue=Supplement |pages=42–62 |doi=10.1521/pedi.2020.34.supp.42 |pmid=32186983 |s2cid=213186868 |issn=0885-579X}}</ref> Of note, Russ et al. observed that this group "do not appear to suffer from underlying feelings of inadequacy or to be prone to negative affect states other than anger", an observation corroborated by recent research which found this variant to show strong inverse associations with depressive, anxious-avoidant, and dependant/victimised features.<ref name=":7" />
'''Grandiose/Malignant''': the group exhibits [[grandiosity]], entitlement, interpersonal exploitativeness and manipulation, pursuit of power and control, lack of empathy and remorse, and marked irritability and hostility. This group was noted for high levels of comorbid [[Antisocial personality disorder|antisocial]] and [[Paranoid personality disorder|paranoid]] personality disorders, [[substance abuse]], [[Externalizing disorder|externalizing]], unemployment and greater likelihood of violence.<ref name=":3" /><ref name=":7">{{cite journal | vauthors = Tanzilli A, Gualco I | title = Clinician Emotional Responses and Therapeutic Alliance When Treating Adolescent Patients With Narcissistic Personality Disorder Subtypes: A Clinically Meaningful Empirical Investigation | journal = Journal of Personality Disorders | volume = 34 | issue = Suppl | pages = 42–62 | date = March 2020 | pmid = 32186983 | doi = 10.1521/pedi.2020.34.supp.42 | s2cid = 213186868 }}</ref> Of note, Russ et al. observed that this group "do not appear to suffer from underlying feelings of inadequacy or to be prone to negative affect states other than anger", an observation corroborated by recent research which found this variant to show strong inverse associations with depressive, anxious-avoidant, and dependant/victimised features.<ref name=":7" />


'''Fragile/Covert''': this variant is defined by feelings of shame, envy, resentment, and inferiority (which is occasionally "masked" by arrogance), entitlement, a belief that one is misunderstood or unappreciated, and excessive reactivity to slights or criticism. This variant is associated with elevated levels of psychological distress and comorbid depression, anxiety, and [[Avoidant personality disorder|avoidant]], [[Borderline personality disorder|borderline]] and [[Dependent personality disorder|dependent]] personality disorders.<ref name=":3" /><ref name=":7" />
'''Fragile/Covert''': this variant is defined by feelings of shame, envy, resentment, and inferiority (which is occasionally "masked" by arrogance), entitlement, a belief that one is misunderstood or unappreciated, and excessive reactivity to slights or criticism. This variant is associated with elevated levels of psychological distress and comorbid depression, anxiety, and [[Avoidant personality disorder|avoidant]], [[Borderline personality disorder|borderline]] and [[Dependent personality disorder|dependent]] personality disorders.<ref name=":3" /><ref name=":7" />
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'''Communal Narcissism'''
'''Communal Narcissism'''


A fourth type is the communal narcissist, who shares the same arrogance and self-motives, and sense of entitlement and grandiosity as the grandiose narcissist but seeks power and admiration in the communal realm. They see themselves as altruistic, saintly, caring, helpful, and warm.<ref>Gebauer, J. E., Sedikides, C., Verplanken, B., & Maio, G. R. (2012). Communal narcissism. ''Journal of Personality and Social Psychology'', 103, 854-878</ref><ref>Lancer, D. (March 6, 2021) "Know the Kind of Narcissist You're Dealing With and Symptoms," [https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/toxic-relationships/202103/know-the-kind-narcissist-youre-dealing-and-symptoms PsychologyToday.com]</ref>{{Confusing|section|talk=talk page|date=October 2021}}
A fourth type is the communal narcissist, who shares the same arrogance and self-motives, and sense of entitlement and grandiosity as the grandiose narcissist but seeks power and admiration in the communal realm. They see themselves as altruistic, saintly, caring, helpful, and warm.<ref name="pmid22889074">{{cite journal | vauthors = Gebauer JE, Sedikides C, Verplanken B, Maio GR | title = Communal narcissism | journal = Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | volume = 103 | issue = 5 | pages = 854–78 | date = November 2012 | pmid = 22889074 | doi = 10.1037/a0029629 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | vauthors = Lancer D | date = 6 March 2021 | title = Know the Kind of Narcissist You're Dealing With and Symptoms | url = https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/toxic-relationships/202103/know-the-kind-narcissist-youre-dealing-and-symptoms | publisher = PsychologyToday.com }}</ref>{{Confusing|section|talk=talk page|date=October 2021}}
'''Millon's Taxonomy'''
'''Millon's Taxonomy'''


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{{Main|Narcissistic Personality Inventory}}
{{Main|Narcissistic Personality Inventory}}


Risk factors for NPD and grandiose/overt and vulnerable/covert subtypes are measured using the [[Narcissistic Personality Inventory|narcissistic personality inventory]], an assessment tool originally developed in 1979, has undergone multiple iterations with new versions in 1984, 2006 and 2014. It captures principally grandiose narcissism, but also seems to capture elements of vulnerability. A popular three-factor model has it that grandiose narcissism is assessed via the Leadership/Authority and Grandiose/Exhibitionism facets, while a combination of grandiose and vulnerable traits are indexed by the Entitlement/Exploitativeness facet.<ref name=":9">Miller, J. D., Lynam, D. R., & Campbell, W. K. (2016). Measures of narcissism and their relations to DSM-5 pathological traits: A critical reappraisal. ''Assessment'', ''23''(1), 3-9.</ref>
Risk factors for NPD and grandiose/overt and vulnerable/covert subtypes are measured using the [[Narcissistic Personality Inventory|narcissistic personality inventory]], an assessment tool originally developed in 1979, has undergone multiple iterations with new versions in 1984, 2006 and 2014. It captures principally grandiose narcissism, but also seems to capture elements of vulnerability. A popular three-factor model has it that grandiose narcissism is assessed via the Leadership/Authority and Grandiose/Exhibitionism facets, while a combination of grandiose and vulnerable traits are indexed by the Entitlement/Exploitativeness facet.<ref name="Miller_2016">{{cite journal | vauthors = Miller JD, Lynam DR, Campbell WK | title = Measures of Narcissism and Their Relations to DSM-5 Pathological Traits: A Critical Reappraisal | journal = Assessment | volume = 23 | issue = 1 | pages = 3–9 | date = February 2016 | pmid = 24550548 | doi = 10.1177/107319111452290 }}</ref>


=== Pathological Narcissism Inventory ===
=== Pathological Narcissism Inventory ===
The Pathological Narcissism Inventory (PNI) was designed to measure fluctuations in grandiose and vulnerable narcissistic states, similar to what is ostensibly observed by some clinicians (though empirical demonstration of this phenomenon is lacking). While having both "grandiosity" and vulnerability scales, empirically both seem to primarily capture vulnerable narcissism. <ref name=":9" /><ref>Miller, J. D., Lynam, D. R., & Campbell, W. K. (2016). Rejoinder: A construct validity approach to the assessment of narcissism. ''Assessment'', ''23''(1), 18-22.</ref>
The Pathological Narcissism Inventory (PNI) was designed to measure fluctuations in grandiose and vulnerable narcissistic states, similar to what is ostensibly observed by some clinicians (though empirical demonstration of this phenomenon is lacking). While having both "grandiosity" and vulnerability scales, empirically both seem to primarily capture vulnerable narcissism. <ref name="Miller_2016" /><ref name="pmid26463683">{{cite journal | vauthors = Miller JD, Lynam DR, Campbell WK | title = Rejoinder: A Construct Validity Approach to the Assessment of Narcissism | journal = Assessment | volume = 23 | issue = 1 | pages = 18–22 | date = February 2016 | pmid = 26463683 | doi = 10.1177/1073191115608943 }}</ref>


The PNI scales show significant associations with [[parasuicidal]] behavior, suicide attempts, homicidal ideation, and several aspects of psychotherapy utilization.<ref name="Pincus et al">{{cite journal |last1=Pincus |first1=AL |last2=Ansell |first2=EB |last3=Pimentel |first3=CA |last4=Cain |first4=NM |last5=Wright |first5=AGC |last6=Levy |first6=KN |date=September 2009 |title=Initial construction and validation of the Pathological Narcissism Inventory. |url=http://www.sakkyndig.com/psykologi/artvit/pincus2009.pdf |journal=[[Psychological Assessment (journal)|Psychological Assessment]] |location=Washington, D.C. |publisher=[[American Psychological Association]] |volume=21 |issue=3 |pages=365–79 |doi=10.1037/a0016530 |pmid=19719348 |access-date=27 March 2020}}</ref>
The PNI scales show significant associations with [[parasuicidal]] behavior, suicide attempts, homicidal ideation, and several aspects of psychotherapy utilization.<ref name="Pincus et al">{{cite journal | vauthors = Pincus AL, Ansell EB, Pimentel CA, Cain NM, Wright AG, Levy KN | title = Initial construction and validation of the Pathological Narcissism Inventory | journal = Psychological Assessment | volume = 21 | issue = 3 | pages = 365–379 | date = September 2009 | pmid = 19719348 | doi = 10.1037/a0016530 | publisher = [[American Psychological Association]] }}</ref>


=== Five-Factor Narcissism Inventory ===
=== Five-Factor Narcissism Inventory ===
The Five-Factor Narcissism Inventory (FFNI) was defined as a comprehensive assay of grandiose and vulnerable expressions of trait narcissism. The scale measures 11 traits of grandiose narcissism and 4 traits of vulnerable narcissism, both of which correlate with clinical ratings of NPD (with grandiose features of arrogance, grandiose fantasies, manipulativeness, entitlement and exploitativeness showing stronger relations).<ref>Miller, J. D., Few, L. R., Wilson, L., Gentile, B., Widiger, T. A., MacKillop, J., & Keith Campbell, W. (2013). The Five-Factor Narcissism Inventory (FFNI): a test of the convergent, discriminant, and incremental validity of FFNI scores in clinical and community samples. ''Psychological assessment'', ''25''(3), 748.</ref> Later analysis revealed that the FFNI actually measures three factors:<ref name=":10">Kaufman, S. B., Weiss, B., Miller, J. D., & Campbell, W. K. (2020). Clinical correlates of vulnerable and grandiose narcissism: a personality perspective. ''Journal of personality disorders'', ''34''(1), 107-130.</ref>
The Five-Factor Narcissism Inventory (FFNI) was defined as a comprehensive assay of grandiose and vulnerable expressions of trait narcissism. The scale measures 11 traits of grandiose narcissism and 4 traits of vulnerable narcissism, both of which correlate with clinical ratings of NPD (with grandiose features of arrogance, grandiose fantasies, manipulativeness, entitlement and exploitativeness showing stronger relations).<ref name="pmid23647044">{{cite journal | vauthors = Miller JD, Few LR, Wilson L, Gentile B, Widiger TA, Mackillop J, Keith Campbell W | title = The Five-Factor Narcissism Inventory (FFNI): a test of the convergent, discriminant, and incremental validity of FFNI scores in clinical and community samples | journal = Psychological Assessment | volume = 25 | issue = 3 | pages = 748–58 | date = September 2013 | pmid = 23647044 | doi = 10.1037/a0032536 }}</ref> Later analysis revealed that the FFNI actually measures three factors:<ref name="Kaufman_2020">{{cite journal | vauthors = Kaufman SB, Weiss B, Miller JD, Campbell WK | title = Clinical Correlates of Vulnerable and Grandiose Narcissism: A Personality Perspective | journal = Journal of Personality Disorders | volume = 34 | issue = 1 | pages = 107–130 | date = February 2020 | pmid = 30179576 | doi = 10.1521/pedi_2018_32_384 | url = }}</ref>


# '''Agentic Extraversion''': an exaggerated sense of self-importance, grandiose fantasies, striving for greatness and acclaim, social dominance and authoritativeness, and exhibitionistic, charming interpersonal conduct.
# '''Agentic Extraversion''': an exaggerated sense of self-importance, grandiose fantasies, striving for greatness and acclaim, social dominance and authoritativeness, and exhibitionistic, charming interpersonal conduct.
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# '''Narcissistic Neuroticism''': shame-proneness, oversensitivity and negative emotionality to criticism and rebuke, and excessive need for admiration to maintain self-esteem.
# '''Narcissistic Neuroticism''': shame-proneness, oversensitivity and negative emotionality to criticism and rebuke, and excessive need for admiration to maintain self-esteem.


Grandiose narcissism is a combination of agency and antagonism, and vulnerability is a combination of antagonism and neuroticism. The three factors show differential associations with clinically important variables. Agentic traits are associated with high self-esteem, positive view others and the future, autonomous and authentic living, commitment to personal growth, sense of purpose in life and life satisfaction. Neurotic traits show precisely the opposite correlation with all of these variables, while antagonistic traits show more complex associations; they are associated with negative view of others (but necessarily of the self), a sense of alienation from their 'true self', disinterest in personal growth, negative relationships with others, and all forms of aggression.<ref name=":10" /><ref>Du, T. V., Miller, J. D., & Lynam, D. R. (2022). The relation between narcissism and aggression: A meta‐analysis. ''Journal of personality'', ''90''(4), 574-594.</ref>
Grandiose narcissism is a combination of agency and antagonism, and vulnerability is a combination of antagonism and neuroticism. The three factors show differential associations with clinically important variables. Agentic traits are associated with high self-esteem, positive view others and the future, autonomous and authentic living, commitment to personal growth, sense of purpose in life and life satisfaction. Neurotic traits show precisely the opposite correlation with all of these variables, while antagonistic traits show more complex associations; they are associated with negative view of others (but necessarily of the self), a sense of alienation from their 'true self', disinterest in personal growth, negative relationships with others, and all forms of aggression.<ref name="Kaufman_2020" /><ref>Du, T. V., Miller, J. D., & Lynam, D. R. (2022). The relation between narcissism and aggression: A meta‐analysis. ''Journal of personality'', ''90''(4), 574-594.</ref>


=== Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory ===
=== Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory ===
{{Main|Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory}}
{{Main|Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory}}


The Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory (MCMI) is another diagnostic test developed by [[Theodore Millon]]. The MCMI includes a scale for narcissism. The NPI and MCMI have been found to be well correlated.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Auerbach JS |date=December 1984 |title=Validation of two scales for narcissistic personality disorder |journal=[[Journal of Personality Assessment]]|publisher=[[Taylor & Francis]]|location=Abingdon, England|volume=48 |issue=6 |pages=649–53 |doi=10.1207/s15327752jpa4806_13 |pmid=6520692}}</ref> Whereas the MCMI measures narcissistic personality disorder (NPD), the NPI measures narcissism as it occurs in the general population; the MCMI is a [[Screening (medicine)|screening tool]]. In other words, the NPI measures "normal" narcissism; i.e., most people who score very high on the NPI do not have NPD. Indeed, the NPI does not capture any sort of narcissism taxon as would be expected if it measured NPD.<ref name="foster1">{{cite journal|first1=Joshua D.|last1=Foster|first2=W. Keith|last2=Campbell|title=Are there such things as 'Narcissists'? A taxometric analysis of the Narcissistic Personality Inventory|journal=[[Personality and Individual Differences]]|volume=43|issue=6|publisher=[[Elsevier]]|location=Amsterdam, Netherlands|date=October 2007|doi=10.1016/j.paid.2007.04.003}}</ref>
The Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory (MCMI) is another diagnostic test developed by [[Theodore Millon]]. The MCMI includes a scale for narcissism. The NPI and MCMI have been found to be well correlated.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Auerbach JS | title = Validation of two scales for narcissistic personality disorder | journal = Journal of Personality Assessment | volume = 48 | issue = 6 | pages = 649–653 | date = December 1984 | pmid = 6520692 | doi = 10.1207/s15327752jpa4806_13 | publisher = [[Taylor & Francis]] }}</ref> Whereas the MCMI measures narcissistic personality disorder (NPD), the NPI measures narcissism as it occurs in the general population; the MCMI is a [[Screening (medicine)|screening tool]]. In other words, the NPI measures "normal" narcissism; i.e., most people who score very high on the NPI do not have NPD. Indeed, the NPI does not capture any sort of narcissism taxon as would be expected if it measured NPD.<ref name="foster1">{{cite journal| vauthors = Foster JD, Campbell WK |title=Are there such things as 'Narcissists'? A taxometric analysis of the Narcissistic Personality Inventory|journal=[[Personality and Individual Differences]]|volume=43|issue=6|publisher=[[Elsevier]]|location=Amsterdam, Netherlands|date=October 2007|doi=10.1016/j.paid.2007.04.003}}</ref>


A 2020 study found that females scored significantly higher on [[vulnerable narcissism]] than males, but no gender differences were found for grandiose narcissism.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Green |first1=Ava |last2=MacLean |first2=Rory |last3=Charles |first3=Kathy |date=December 1, 2020 |title=Recollections of parenting styles in the development of narcissism: The role of gender |url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0191886920304359 |journal=[[Personality and Individual Differences]] |publisher=[[Elsevier]]|location=Amsterdam, Netherlands|language=en |volume=167 |page=110246 |doi=10.1016/j.paid.2020.110246 |issn=0191-8869 |s2cid=224958195}}</ref>
A 2020 study found that females scored significantly higher on [[vulnerable narcissism]] than males, but no gender differences were found for grandiose narcissism.<ref>{{Cite journal | vauthors = Green A, MacLean R, Charles K |date=December 1, 2020 |title=Recollections of parenting styles in the development of narcissism: The role of gender |journal=[[Personality and Individual Differences]] |publisher=[[Elsevier]]|location=Amsterdam, Netherlands|language=en |volume=167 |page=110246 |doi=10.1016/j.paid.2020.110246 |issn=0191-8869 |s2cid=224958195}}</ref>


== Causes ==
== Causes ==


Although there are no specific causes for NPD, it is described using the [[biopsychosocial model]] which describes a combination of [[risk factor]]s from biological, psychological and socio-environmental factors.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":6">{{cite book |last1=Luo |first1=Yu L. L. |chapter=The Etiology of Narcissism: A Review of Behavioral Genetic Studies |date=2018 |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-92171-6_16 |title=Handbook of Trait Narcissism |pages=149–156 |publisher=[[Springer International Publishing]] |location=New York City|isbn=978-3-319-92170-9 |access-date=2022-05-02 |last2=Cai |first2=Huajian|doi=10.1007/978-3-319-92171-6_16 }}</ref> This includes but is not limited to genetics, [[neurobiology]], trauma, abuse and parenting.
Although there are no specific causes for NPD, it is described using the [[biopsychosocial model]] which describes a combination of [[risk factor]]s from biological, psychological and socio-environmental factors.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":6">{{cite book | vauthors = Luo Y, Cai HL |chapter=The Etiology of Narcissism: A Review of Behavioral Genetic Studies |date=2018 |title=Handbook of Trait Narcissism |pages=149–156 |publisher=[[Springer International Publishing]] |location=New York City|isbn=978-3-319-92170-9 |doi=10.1007/978-3-319-92171-6_16 }}</ref> This includes but is not limited to genetics, [[neurobiology]], trauma, abuse and parenting.


=== Genetic ===
=== Genetic ===
Evidence suggests there is a high [[heritability]] of NPD, with a number of genetic influences indicating varying rates of heritability based on subtype.<ref name=":6" /><ref name="Paris" /><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Torgersen |first1=Svenn |last2=Myers |first2=John |last3=Reichborn-Kjennerud |first3=Ted |last4=Røysamb |first4=Espen |last5=Kubarych |first5=Thomas S. |last6=Kendler |first6=Kenneth S. |date=September 17, 2012 |title=The Heritability of Cluster B Personality Disorders Assessed Both by Personal Interview and Questionnaire |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1521/pedi_2012_26_060 |journal=[[Journal of Personality Disorders]] |volume=26 |issue=6 |publisher=[[Guilford Press]]|location=New York City|pages=848–866 |doi=10.1521/pedi_2012_26_060 |pmid=23281671 |pmc=3606922 |issn=0885-579X}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Reichborn-Kjennerud|first1=Ted|date=1 March 2010|title=The Genetic Epidemiology of Personality Disorders|journal=[[Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience]]|publisher=[[Taylor & Francis]]|location=Abingdon, England|volume=12|issue=1|pages=103–14|doi=10.31887/DCNS.2010.12.1/trkjennerud|issn=1294-8322|pmc=3181941|pmid=20373672}}</ref> A number of twin studies historically suggested for the heritability of NPD, including personality disorders in general.<ref>{{cite journal|vauthors=Livesley WJ, Jang KL, Jackson DN, Vernon PA|date=December 1993|title=Genetic and environmental contributions to dimensions of personality disorder|journal=Am J Psychiatry|volume=150|issue=12|pages=1826–31|doi=10.1176/ajp.150.12.1826|pmid=8238637}}</ref><ref name="Torgersen">{{Cite journal|last1=Torgersen|first1=S.|last2=Lygren|first2=S.|last3=Oien|first3=P. A.|last4=Skre|first4=I.|last5=Onstad|first5=S.|last6=Edvardsen|first6=J.|last7=Tambs|first7=K.|last8=Kringlen|first8=E.|date=November 2000|title=A twin study of personality disorders|url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11086146|journal=Comprehensive Psychiatry|volume=41|issue=6|pages=416–25|doi=10.1053/comp.2000.16560|issn=0010-440X|pmid=11086146}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Luo |first1=Yu L. L. |last2=Cai |first2=Huajian |last3=Song |first3=Hairong |date=2014-04-02 |editor-last=García |editor-first=Antonio Verdejo |title=A Behavioral Genetic Study of Intrapersonal and Interpersonal Dimensions of Narcissism |journal=PLOS ONE |language=en |volume=9 |issue=4 |pages=e93403 |doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0093403 |issn=1932-6203 |pmc=3973692 |pmid=24695616|bibcode=2014PLoSO...993403L |doi-access=free }}</ref>
Evidence suggests there is a high [[heritability]] of NPD, with a number of genetic influences indicating varying rates of heritability based on subtype.<ref name=":6" /><ref name="Paris" /><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Torgersen S, Myers J, Reichborn-Kjennerud T, Røysamb E, Kubarych TS, Kendler KS | title = The heritability of Cluster B personality disorders assessed both by personal interview and questionnaire | journal = Journal of Personality Disorders | volume = 26 | issue = 6 | pages = 848–866 | date = December 2012 | pmid = 23281671 | pmc = 3606922 | doi = 10.1521/pedi_2012_26_060 | publisher = [[Guilford Press]] }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Reichborn-Kjennerud T | title = The genetic epidemiology of personality disorders | journal = Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience | volume = 12 | issue = 1 | pages = 103–114 | date = 1 March 2010 | pmid = 20373672 | pmc = 3181941 | doi = 10.31887/DCNS.2010.12.1/trkjennerud | publisher = [[Taylor & Francis]] }}</ref> A number of twin studies historically suggested for the heritability of NPD, including personality disorders in general.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Livesley WJ, Jang KL, Jackson DN, Vernon PA | title = Genetic and environmental contributions to dimensions of personality disorder | journal = The American Journal of Psychiatry | volume = 150 | issue = 12 | pages = 1826–1831 | date = December 1993 | pmid = 8238637 | doi = 10.1176/ajp.150.12.1826 }}</ref><ref name="Torgersen">{{cite journal | vauthors = Torgersen S, Lygren S, Oien PA, Skre I, Onstad S, Edvardsen J, Tambs K, Kringlen E | display-authors = 6 | title = A twin study of personality disorders | journal = Comprehensive Psychiatry | volume = 41 | issue = 6 | pages = 416–425 | date = November 2000 | pmid = 11086146 | doi = 10.1053/comp.2000.16560 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Luo YL, Cai H, Song H | title = A behavioral genetic study of intrapersonal and interpersonal dimensions of narcissism | journal = PloS One | volume = 9 | issue = 4 | pages = e93403 | date = 2014-04-02 | pmid = 24695616 | pmc = 3973692 | doi = 10.1371/journal.pone.0093403 | bibcode = 2014PLoSO...993403L | doi-access = free | veditors = García AV }}</ref>


=== Environment ===
=== Environment ===
Environmental and social factors also influence development of NPD.<ref name="Paris" /> In some people, vulnerable narcissism (or fragile/covert NPD) may develop from an impaired [[Attachment theory|emotional attachment]] to primary caregivers (usually parents).<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Montoro |first=Casandra I. |last2=de la Coba |first2=Pablo |last3=Moreno-Padilla |first3=María |last4=Galvez-Sánchez |first4=Carmen M. |date=2022-04 |title=Narcissistic Personality and Its Relationship with Post-Traumatic Symptoms and Emotional Factors: Results of a Mediational Analysis Aimed at Personalizing Mental Health Treatment |url=https://www.mdpi.com/2076-328X/12/4/91 |journal=Behavioral Sciences |language=en |volume=12 |issue=4 |pages=91 |doi=10.3390/bs12040091 |issn=2076-328X |pmc=PMC9031722 |pmid=35447664}}</ref><ref name="Magid">{{cite book|first=Ken|last=Magid|title=High Risk Children without a Conscience|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=88C74pQcIm4C|access-date=17 November 2012|year=1987|publisher=[[Bantam Books]]|location=New York City|isbn=978-0553052909|page=67}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite web |last=Networker |first=Psychotherapy |title=Challenging The Narcissist |url=https://www.psychotherapynetworker.org/article/challenging-narcissist |access-date=2023-03-25 |website=www.psychotherapynetworker.org |language=en}}</ref>That lack of psychological and emotional attachment to a parental figure can result in the child's perception of themselves as unimportant and unconnected to other people, usually, family, community and society. Typically, the child comes to believe that they have a personality defect that makes them unvalued and unwanted.<ref name="Johns">{{cite book|first=Stephen M.|last=Johnson|title=Humanizing the Narcissistic Style|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WxV2QgAACAAJ|access-date=29 October 2013|year=1987|publisher=[[W.W. Norton]]|location=New York City|isbn=978-0393700374|page=39|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140704131400/http://books.google.com/books?id=WxV2QgAACAAJ|archive-date=4 July 2014|df=dmy-all}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Araminta |title=Narcissim and Chilhood Emotional Neglect |url=.https://khironclinics.com/blog/narcissism-and-childhood-emotional-neglect/ |url-status=live |access-date=22/03/2023 |website=Khiron Clinics}}</ref> While very little is known about the origins of grandiose narcissism (or its concomitant subtypes of NPD), there it is often suggested that overindulgent, permissive parenting or insensitive and over-controlling parenting are risk factors towards the development of NPD in a child.<ref name="mayo1" /><ref name="medline" />
Environmental and social factors also influence development of NPD.<ref name="Paris" /> In some people, vulnerable narcissism (or fragile/covert NPD) may develop from an impaired [[Attachment theory|emotional attachment]] to primary caregivers (usually parents).<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Montoro CI, de la Coba P, Moreno-Padilla M, Galvez-Sánchez CM | title = Narcissistic Personality and Its Relationship with Post-Traumatic Symptoms and Emotional Factors: Results of a Mediational Analysis Aimed at Personalizing Mental Health Treatment | journal = Behavioral Sciences | volume = 12 | issue = 4 | pages = 91 | date = March 2022 | pmid = 35447664 | pmc = 9031722 | doi = 10.3390/bs12040091 }}</ref><ref name="Magid">{{cite book| vauthors = Magid K |title=High Risk Children without a Conscience|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=88C74pQcIm4C|access-date=17 November 2012|year=1987|publisher=[[Bantam Books]]|location=New York City|isbn=978-0553052909|page=67}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite web |last=Networker |first=Psychotherapy |title=Challenging The Narcissist |url=https://www.psychotherapynetworker.org/article/challenging-narcissist |access-date=2023-03-25 |website=www.psychotherapynetworker.org |language=en}}</ref>That lack of psychological and emotional attachment to a parental figure can result in the child's perception of themselves as unimportant and unconnected to other people, usually, family, community and society. Typically, the child comes to believe that they have a personality defect that makes them unvalued and unwanted.<ref name="Johns">{{cite book| vauthors = Johnson SM |title=Humanizing the Narcissistic Style|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WxV2QgAACAAJ|access-date=29 October 2013|year=1987|publisher=[[W.W. Norton]]|location=New York City|isbn=978-0393700374|page=39|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140704131400/http://books.google.com/books?id=WxV2QgAACAAJ|archive-date=4 July 2014|df=dmy-all}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Araminta |title=Narcissim and Chilhood Emotional Neglect |url = https://khironclinics.com/blog/narcissism-and-childhood-emotional-neglect/ |access-date= 22 March 2023 |website=Khiron Clinics}}</ref> While very little is known about the origins of grandiose narcissism (or its concomitant subtypes of NPD), there it is often suggested that overindulgent, permissive parenting or insensitive and over-controlling parenting are risk factors towards the development of NPD in a child.<ref name="mayo1" /><ref name="medline" />


In ''Gabbard's Treatments of Psychiatric Disorders'' (2014), the following factors are identified as promoting the development of narcissistic personality disorder:<ref>{{Cite book|url=|title=Gabbard's treatments of psychiatric disorders|date=2014|first=Glen O.|last=Gabbard|authorlink=Glen. O. Gabbard|publisher=[[American Psychiatric Association]]|location=Washington, D.C.|isbn=978-1585624423|edition=Fifth/DSM-5|doi=10.1176/appi.books.9781585625048.gg72|oclc=872383308}}</ref>
In ''Gabbard's Treatments of Psychiatric Disorders'' (2014), the following factors are identified as promoting the development of narcissistic personality disorder:<ref>{{Cite book|url=|title=Gabbard's treatments of psychiatric disorders|date=2014| vauthors = Gabbard G |authorlink=Glen. O. Gabbard|publisher=[[American Psychiatric Association]]|location=Washington, D.C.|isbn=978-1585624423|edition=Fifth/DSM-5|doi=10.1176/appi.books.9781585625048.gg72|oclc=872383308}}</ref>


* An oversensitive temperament (individual differences of behavior) at birth<ref>{{Cite web |title=Narcissistic Personality Disorder - HelpGuide.org |url=https://www.helpguide.org/articles/mental-disorders/narcissistic-personality-disorder.htm |access-date=2023-03-25 |website=https://www.helpguide.org |language=en-US}}</ref>
* An oversensitive temperament (individual differences of behavior) at birth<ref>{{Cite web |title=Narcissistic Personality Disorder - HelpGuide.org |url=https://www.helpguide.org/articles/mental-disorders/narcissistic-personality-disorder.htm |access-date=2023-03-25 |website = www.helpguide.org |language=en-US}}</ref>
* Excessive admiration that is never balanced with realistic criticism
* Excessive admiration that is never balanced with realistic criticism
* Excessive praise for good behaviors, or excessive criticism for bad behaviors in childhood
* Excessive praise for good behaviors, or excessive criticism for bad behaviors in childhood
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* Trauma caused by [[psychological abuse]], [[physical abuse]] or [[sexual abuse]] in childhood
* Trauma caused by [[psychological abuse]], [[physical abuse]] or [[sexual abuse]] in childhood
* Unpredictable or unreliable parental caregiving
* Unpredictable or unreliable parental caregiving
* Learning the behaviors of [[psychological manipulation]] from parents or peers<ref name="AMN">{{cite web|first1=Leonard C.|last1=Groopman|first2=Arnold M.|last2=Cooper|year=2006|title=Narcissistic Personality Disorder|url=http://www.health.am/psy/narcissistic-personality-disorder/|access-date=February 14, 2007|work=Personality Disorders – Narcissistic Personality Disorder|publisher=Armenian Medical Network|location=Congers, New York}}</ref>
* Learning the behaviors of [[psychological manipulation]] from parents or peers<ref name="AMN">{{cite web| vauthors = Groopman LC, Cooper AM |year=2006|title=Narcissistic Personality Disorder|url=http://www.health.am/psy/narcissistic-personality-disorder/|access-date=February 14, 2007|work=Personality Disorders – Narcissistic Personality Disorder|publisher=Armenian Medical Network|location=Congers, New York}}</ref>


Moreover, the research reported in "Modernity and Narcissistic Personality Disorders" (2014) indicates that cultural elements also influence the prevalence of NPD, because narcissistic personality traits more commonly occur in [[Modernity|modern]] societies than in [[Traditionalist conservatism|traditionalist conservative]] societies.<ref name="Paris" />
Moreover, the research reported in "Modernity and Narcissistic Personality Disorders" (2014) indicates that cultural elements also influence the prevalence of NPD, because narcissistic personality traits more commonly occur in [[Modernity|modern]] societies than in [[Traditionalist conservatism|traditionalist conservative]] societies.<ref name="Paris" />


=== Pathophysiology ===
=== Pathophysiology ===
Studies of the occurrence of narcissistic personality disorder identified structural abnormalities in the brains of people with NPD, specifically, a lesser volume of [[gray matter]] in the left, anterior [[insular cortex]].<ref name="Schulze">{{Cite journal|last1=Schulze|first1=Lars|last2=Dziobek|first2=Isabel|last3=Vater|first3=Aline|last4=Heekeren|first4=Hauke R.|last5=Bajbouj|first5=Malek|last6=Renneberg|first6=Babette|last7=Heuser|first7=Isabella|last8=Roepke|first8=Stefan|date=October 2013|title=Gray matter abnormalities in patients with narcissistic personality disorder|url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23777939|journal=[[Journal of Psychiatric Research]]|publisher=[[Elsevier]]|location=Amsterdam, Netherlands|volume=47|issue=10|pages=1363–69|doi=10.1016/j.jpsychires.2013.05.017|issn=1879-1379|pmid=23777939}}</ref><ref name="PsychCentral">{{cite web|url=https://psychcentral.com/news/2013/07/06/narcissists-lack-of-empathy-tied-to-less-gray-matter/56907.html|title=Narcissists' Lack of Empathy Tied to Less Gray Matter|last=Pedersen|first=Traci|date=6 October 2015|publisher=[[PsychCentral]]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140424210941/http://psychcentral.com/news/2013/07/06/narcissists-lack-of-empathy-tied-to-less-gray-matter/56907.html|archive-date=24 April 2014|url-status=live|access-date=2014-04-24|df=dmy-all}}</ref> The results of a 2015 study associated the condition of NPD with a reduced volume of gray matter in the [[prefrontal cortex]].<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Nenadic|first1=Igor|last2=Güllmar|first2=Daniel|last3=Dietzek|first3=Maren|last4=Langbein|first4=Kerstin|last5=Steinke|first5=Johanna|last6=Gader|first6=Christian|date=February 2015|title=Brain Structure in Narcissistic Personality Disorder: A VBM and DTI Pilot Study|journal=[[Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging]]|publisher=Elsevier Ireland|volume=231|issue=2|pages=184–86|doi=10.1016/j.pscychresns.2014.11.001|pmid=25492857|s2cid=17073607}}</ref> The regions of the brain identified and studied – the insular cortex and the prefrontal cortex – are associated with the human emotions of [[empathy]] and [[compassion]], and with the mental functions of [[cognition]] and [[emotional regulation]]. The neurologic findings of the studies suggest that NPD may be related to a compromised (damaged) capacity for emotional empathy and emotional regulation.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Ronningstam|first1=Elsa|date=19 January 2016|title=Pathological Narcissism and Narcissistic Personality Disorder: Recent Research and Clinical Implications|url=http://bostonneuropsa.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/CBNsR-NPD-ER-in-Print-01-20-2016-2-1.pdf|url-status=live|journal=Current Behavioral Neuroscience Reports|volume=3|issue=1|pages=34–42|doi=10.1007/s40473-016-0060-y|s2cid=49575408|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180817021647/http://bostonneuropsa.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/CBNsR-NPD-ER-in-Print-01-20-2016-2-1.pdf|archive-date=17 August 2018}}</ref>
Studies of the occurrence of narcissistic personality disorder identified structural abnormalities in the brains of people with NPD, specifically, a lesser volume of [[gray matter]] in the left, anterior [[insular cortex]].<ref name="Schulze">{{cite journal | vauthors = Schulze L, Dziobek I, Vater A, Heekeren HR, Bajbouj M, Renneberg B, Heuser I, Roepke S | display-authors = 6 | title = Gray matter abnormalities in patients with narcissistic personality disorder | journal = Journal of Psychiatric Research | volume = 47 | issue = 10 | pages = 1363–1369 | date = October 2013 | pmid = 23777939 | doi = 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2013.05.017 | publisher = [[Elsevier]] }}</ref><ref name="PsychCentral">{{cite web|url=https://psychcentral.com/news/2013/07/06/narcissists-lack-of-empathy-tied-to-less-gray-matter/56907.html|title=Narcissists' Lack of Empathy Tied to Less Gray Matter| vauthors = Pedersen T |date=6 October 2015|publisher=[[PsychCentral]]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140424210941/http://psychcentral.com/news/2013/07/06/narcissists-lack-of-empathy-tied-to-less-gray-matter/56907.html|archive-date=24 April 2014|url-status=live|access-date=2014-04-24|df=dmy-all}}</ref> The results of a 2015 study associated the condition of NPD with a reduced volume of gray matter in the [[prefrontal cortex]].<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Nenadic I, Güllmar D, Dietzek M, Langbein K, Steinke J, Gaser C | title = Brain structure in narcissistic personality disorder: a VBM and DTI pilot study | journal = Psychiatry Research | volume = 231 | issue = 2 | pages = 184–186 | date = February 2015 | pmid = 25492857 | doi = 10.1016/j.pscychresns.2014.11.001 | publisher = Elsevier Ireland | s2cid = 17073607 }}</ref> The regions of the brain identified and studied – the insular cortex and the prefrontal cortex – are associated with the human emotions of [[empathy]] and [[compassion]], and with the mental functions of [[cognition]] and [[emotional regulation]]. The neurologic findings of the studies suggest that NPD may be related to a compromised (damaged) capacity for emotional empathy and emotional regulation.<ref>{{cite journal| vauthors = Ronningstam E |date=19 January 2016|title=Pathological Narcissism and Narcissistic Personality Disorder: Recent Research and Clinical Implications|url=http://bostonneuropsa.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/CBNsR-NPD-ER-in-Print-01-20-2016-2-1.pdf|url-status=live|journal=Current Behavioral Neuroscience Reports|volume=3|issue=1|pages=34–42|doi=10.1007/s40473-016-0060-y|s2cid=49575408|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180817021647/http://bostonneuropsa.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/CBNsR-NPD-ER-in-Print-01-20-2016-2-1.pdf|archive-date=17 August 2018}}</ref>


== Management ==
== Management ==
Treatment for NPD is primarily [[Psychotherapy|psychotherapeutic]]; there is no clear evidence that [[Psychopharmacology|psychopharmacological]] treatment is effective for NPD, although it can prove useful for treating comorbid disorders.<ref name=":1" /><ref name="mayo2">{{cite web |date=18 November 2017 |title=Narcissistic personality disorder – Diagnosis and treatment |url=https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/narcissistic-personality-disorder/diagnosis-treatment/drc-20366690 |access-date=28 June 2018 |website=mayoclinic.org}}</ref> Psychotherapeutic treatment falls into two general categories: [[Psychoanalysis|psychoanalytic]]/[[Psychodynamic psychotherapy|psychodynamic]] and cognitive behavioral. Psychoanalytic therapies include [[schema therapy]], [[transference focused psychotherapy]], [[mentalization-based treatment]] and [[Metacognitive therapy|metacognitive psychotherapy]]. Cognitive behavioral therapies include [[cognitive behavioral therapy]] and [[dialectical behavior therapy]]. Formats also include [[group therapy]] and [[couples therapy]].<ref name=":4" /> The specific choice of treatment varies based on individual presentations.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Kramer |first1=Ueli |last2=Berthoud |first2=Laurent |last3=Keller |first3=Sabine |last4=Caspar |first4=Franz |date=June 2014 |title=Motive-Oriented Psychotherapeutic Relationship Facing a Patient Presenting with Narcissistic Personality Disorder: A Case Study |url=https://doi.org/10.1007%2Fs10879-013-9249-5 |journal=Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy |volume=44 |issue=2 |pages=71–82 |doi=10.1007/s10879-013-9249-5 |s2cid=9514109 |access-date=25 April 2022}}</ref>
Treatment for NPD is primarily [[Psychotherapy|psychotherapeutic]]; there is no clear evidence that [[Psychopharmacology|psychopharmacological]] treatment is effective for NPD, although it can prove useful for treating comorbid disorders.<ref name=":1" /><ref name="mayo2">{{cite web |date=18 November 2017 |title=Narcissistic personality disorder – Diagnosis and treatment |url=https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/narcissistic-personality-disorder/diagnosis-treatment/drc-20366690 |access-date=28 June 2018 |website=mayoclinic.org}}</ref> Psychotherapeutic treatment falls into two general categories: [[Psychoanalysis|psychoanalytic]]/[[Psychodynamic psychotherapy|psychodynamic]] and cognitive behavioral. Psychoanalytic therapies include [[schema therapy]], [[transference focused psychotherapy]], [[mentalization-based treatment]] and [[Metacognitive therapy|metacognitive psychotherapy]]. Cognitive behavioral therapies include [[cognitive behavioral therapy]] and [[dialectical behavior therapy]]. Formats also include [[group therapy]] and [[couples therapy]].<ref name=":4" /> The specific choice of treatment varies based on individual presentations.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Kramer U, Berthoud L, Keller S, Caspar F |date=June 2014 |title=Motive-Oriented Psychotherapeutic Relationship Facing a Patient Presenting with Narcissistic Personality Disorder: A Case Study |journal=Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy |volume=44 |issue=2 |pages=71–82 |doi=10.1007/s10879-013-9249-5 |s2cid=9514109 }}</ref>


Management of narcissistic personality disorder has not been well studied, however many treatments tailored to NPD exist.<ref name=":5" /><ref name="Cal2015" /> Therapy is complicated by the lack of treatment-seeking behavior in people with NPD, despite [[mental distress]]. Additionally, people with narcissistic personality disorders have decreased life satisfaction and lower qualities of life, irrespective of diagnosis.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Soyer|first1=Renate B.|last2=Rovenpor|first2=Janet L.|last3=Kopelman|first3=Richard E.|last4=Mullins|first4=Lynn S.|last5=Watson|first5=P. J.|date=May 2001|title=Further Assessment of the Construct Validity of Four Measures of Narcissism: Replication and Extension|url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00223980109603695|journal=The Journal of Psychology|language=en|volume=135|issue=3|pages=245–58|doi=10.1080/00223980109603695|pmid=11577967|s2cid=31486515|issn=0022-3980}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last1=Morf|first1=Carolyn C|url=https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-405182|title=Expanding the nomological net of the pathological narcissism inventory German validation and extension in a clinical inpatient sample|last2=Schürch|first2=Eva|last3=Küfner|first3=Albrecht|last4=Siegrist|first4=Philip|last5=Vater|first5=Aline|last6=Back|first6=Mitja|last7=Mestel|first7=Robert|last8=Schröder-Abé|first8=Michela|date=2018|language=English|oclc=1236181501}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Egan|first1=Vincent|last2=Chan|first2=Stephanie|last3=Shorter|first3=Gillian W.|date=September 2014|title=The Dark Triad, happiness and subjective well-being|url=https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0191886914000130|journal=Personality and Individual Differences|language=en|volume=67|pages=17–22|doi=10.1016/j.paid.2014.01.004|s2cid=17277308 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Soeteman|first1=Djøra I.|last2=Verheul|first2=Roel|last3=Busschbach|first3=Jan J.V.|date=June 2008|title=The Burden of Disease in Personality Disorders: Diagnosis-Specific Quality of Life|url=http://guilfordjournals.com/doi/10.1521/pedi.2008.22.3.259|journal=Journal of Personality Disorders|language=en|volume=22|issue=3|pages=259–68|doi=10.1521/pedi.2008.22.3.259|pmid=18540798|issn=0885-579X}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Ellison|first1=William D.|last2=Acuff|first2=M. Chase|last3=Kealy|first3=David|last4=Joyce|first4=Anthony S.|last5=Ogrodniczuk|first5=John S.|date=August 2020|title=Narcissism and Quality of Life: The Mediating Role of Relationship Patterns|url=https://dx.doi.org/10.1097/NMD.0000000000001170|journal=Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease|language=en|volume=208|issue=8|pages=613–18|doi=10.1097/NMD.0000000000001170|pmid=32229790|s2cid=213949270|issn=1539-736X}}</ref> People with NPD often present with comorbid mental disorders, complicating diagnosis and treatment.<ref name="Cal2015">{{Cite journal|last1=Caligor|first1=Eve|last2=Levy|first2=Kenneth N.|last3=Yeomans|first3=Frank E.|date=May 2015|title=Narcissistic personality disorder: diagnostic and clinical challenges|url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25930131|journal=The American Journal of Psychiatry|volume=172|issue=5|pages=415–22|doi=10.1176/appi.ajp.2014.14060723|issn=1535-7228|pmid=25930131}}</ref> NPD is rarely the primary reason for which people seek mental health treatment. When people with NPD enter treatment (psychologic or psychiatric), they often express seeking relief from a comorbid mental disorder, including [[major depressive disorder]], a [[substance use disorder]] (drug addiction), or [[bipolar disorder]].<ref name="ronningstam2016" />
Management of narcissistic personality disorder has not been well studied, however many treatments tailored to NPD exist.<ref name=":5" /><ref name="Cal2015" /> Therapy is complicated by the lack of treatment-seeking behavior in people with NPD, despite [[mental distress]]. Additionally, people with narcissistic personality disorders have decreased life satisfaction and lower qualities of life, irrespective of diagnosis.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Soyer RB, Rovenpor JL, Kopelman RE, Mullins LS, Watson PJ | title = Further assessment of the construct validity of four measures of narcissism: replication and extension | journal = The Journal of Psychology | volume = 135 | issue = 3 | pages = 245–258 | date = May 2001 | pmid = 11577967 | doi = 10.1080/00223980109603695 | s2cid = 31486515 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book| vauthors = Morf CC, Schürch E, Küfner A, Siegrist P, Vater A, Back M, Mestel R, Schröder-Abé M |url=https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-405182|title=Expanding the nomological net of the pathological narcissism inventory German validation and extension in a clinical inpatient sample |date=2018|language=English|oclc=1236181501}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal| vauthors = Egan V, Chan S, Shorter GW |date=September 2014|title=The Dark Triad, happiness and subjective well-being |journal=Personality and Individual Differences|language=en|volume=67|pages=17–22|doi=10.1016/j.paid.2014.01.004|s2cid=17277308 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Soeteman DI, Verheul R, Busschbach JJ | title = The burden of disease in personality disorders: diagnosis-specific quality of life | journal = Journal of Personality Disorders | volume = 22 | issue = 3 | pages = 259–268 | date = June 2008 | pmid = 18540798 | doi = 10.1521/pedi.2008.22.3.259 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Ellison WD, Acuff MC, Kealy D, Joyce AS, Ogrodniczuk JS | title = Narcissism and Quality of Life: The Mediating Role of Relationship Patterns | journal = The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | volume = 208 | issue = 8 | pages = 613–618 | date = August 2020 | pmid = 32229790 | doi = 10.1097/NMD.0000000000001170 | s2cid = 213949270 }}</ref> People with NPD often present with comorbid mental disorders, complicating diagnosis and treatment.<ref name="Cal2015">{{cite journal | vauthors = Caligor E, Levy KN, Yeomans FE | title = Narcissistic personality disorder: diagnostic and clinical challenges | journal = The American Journal of Psychiatry | volume = 172 | issue = 5 | pages = 415–422 | date = May 2015 | pmid = 25930131 | doi = 10.1176/appi.ajp.2014.14060723 }}</ref> NPD is rarely the primary reason for which people seek mental health treatment. When people with NPD enter treatment (psychologic or psychiatric), they often express seeking relief from a comorbid mental disorder, including [[major depressive disorder]], a [[substance use disorder]] (drug addiction), or [[bipolar disorder]].<ref name="ronningstam2016" />


== Prognosis ==
== Prognosis ==
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== Epidemiology ==
== Epidemiology ==
{{As of|2018}}, overall prevalence is estimated to range from 0.8% to 6.2%.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Cailhol |first1=Lionel |last2=Pelletier |first2=Éric |last3=Rochette |first3=Louis |last4=Laporte |first4=Lise |last5=David |first5=Pierre |last6=Villeneuve |first6=Évens |last7=Paris |first7=Joel |last8=Lesage |first8=Alain |date=2017-04-12 |title=Prevalence, Mortality, and Health Care Use among Patients with Cluster B Personality Disorders Clinically Diagnosed in Quebec: A Provincial Cohort Study, 2001-2012 |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0706743717700818 |journal=The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry |volume=62 |issue=5 |pages=336–342 |doi=10.1177/0706743717700818 |pmid=28403655 |pmc=5459230 |issn=0706-7437}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Dhawan|first1=Nikhil|last2=Kunik|first2=Mark E.|last3=Oldham|first3=John|last4=Coverdale|first4=John|author4-link=John H. Coverdale|title=Prevalence and Treatment of Narcissistic Personality Disorder in the Community: A Systematic Review|journal=[[Comprehensive Psychiatry]]|date=July–August 2010|volume=51|issue=4|pages=333–39|doi=10.1016/j.comppsych.2009.09.003|pmid=20579503}}</ref> In 2008 under the DSM-IV, lifetime prevalence of NPD was estimated to be 6.2%, with 7.7% for men and 4.8% for women,<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Stinson |first1=Frederick S. |last2=Dawson |first2=Deborah A. |last3=Goldstein |first3=Risë B. |last4=Chou |first4=S. Patricia |last5=Huang |first5=Boji |last6=Smith |first6=Sharon M. |last7=Ruan |first7=W. June |last8=Pulay |first8=Attila J. |last9=Saha |first9=Tulshi D. |last10=Pickering |first10=Roger P. |last11=Grant |first11=Bridget F. |date=July 2008 |title=Prevalence, correlates, disability, and comorbidity of DSM-IV narcissistic personality disorder: results from the wave 2 national epidemiologic survey on alcohol and related conditions |journal=The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry |volume=69 |issue=7 |pages=1033–1045 |doi=10.4088/jcp.v69n0701 |issn=1555-2101 |pmc=2669224 |pmid=18557663}}</ref> with a 2015 study confirming the gender difference.<ref name="Grijalva">{{cite journal |last1=Grijalva |first1=Emily |last2=Newman |first2=Daniel A. |last3=Tay |first3=Louis |last4=Donnellan |first4=M. Brent |last5=Harms |first5=Peter D. |year=2015 |title=Gender Differences in Narcissism: A Meta-analytic Review |url=http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1004&context=pdharms |url-status=live |journal=[[Psychological Bulletin]] |volume=141 |issue=2 |pages=261–310 |doi=10.1037/a0038231 |pmid=25546498 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170217233154/http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1004&context=pdharms |archive-date=17 February 2017}}</ref> In clinical settings, prevalence estimates range from 1% to 15%.<ref name=":0" /><ref name="Sed2009">{{cite book |last1=Sederer |first1=Lloyd I. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7_7-5dQIpBQC&pg=PA29 |title=Blueprints Psychiatry |date=2009 |publisher=Wolters Kluwer/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins |isbn=978-0781782531 |edition=Fifth |location=Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |page=29 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170111195341/https://books.google.com/books?id=7_7-5dQIpBQC&pg=PA29 |archive-date=11 January 2017 |url-status=live |via=Google Books |df=dmy-all}}</ref> The occurrence of narcissistic personality disorder presents a high rate of [[comorbidity]] with other mental disorders.<ref name="Paris" />
{{As of|2018}}, overall prevalence is estimated to range from 0.8% to 6.2%.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Cailhol L, Pelletier É, Rochette L, Laporte L, David P, Villeneuve É, Paris J, Lesage A | display-authors = 6 | title = Prevalence, Mortality, and Health Care Use among Patients with Cluster B Personality Disorders Clinically Diagnosed in Quebec: A Provincial Cohort Study, 2001-2012 | journal = Canadian Journal of Psychiatry. Revue Canadienne De Psychiatrie | volume = 62 | issue = 5 | pages = 336–342 | date = May 2017 | pmid = 28403655 | pmc = 5459230 | doi = 10.1177/0706743717700818 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Dhawan N, Kunik ME, Oldham J, Coverdale J | title = Prevalence and treatment of narcissistic personality disorder in the community: a systematic review | journal = Comprehensive Psychiatry | volume = 51 | issue = 4 | pages = 333–339 | date = July–August 2010 | pmid = 20579503 | doi = 10.1016/j.comppsych.2009.09.003 | author4-link = John H. Coverdale }}</ref> In 2008 under the DSM-IV, lifetime prevalence of NPD was estimated to be 6.2%, with 7.7% for men and 4.8% for women,<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Stinson FS, Dawson DA, Goldstein RB, Chou SP, Huang B, Smith SM, Ruan WJ, Pulay AJ, Saha TD, Pickering RP, Grant BF | display-authors = 6 | title = Prevalence, correlates, disability, and comorbidity of DSM-IV narcissistic personality disorder: results from the wave 2 national epidemiologic survey on alcohol and related conditions | journal = The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | volume = 69 | issue = 7 | pages = 1033–1045 | date = July 2008 | pmid = 18557663 | pmc = 2669224 | doi = 10.4088/jcp.v69n0701 }}</ref> with a 2015 study confirming the gender difference.<ref name="Grijalva">{{cite journal | vauthors = Grijalva E, Newman DA, Tay L, Donnellan MB, Harms PD, Robins RW, Yan T | title = Gender differences in narcissism: a meta-analytic review | journal = Psychological Bulletin | volume = 141 | issue = 2 | pages = 261–310 | date = March 2015 | pmid = 25546498 | doi = 10.1037/a0038231 | url = http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1004&context=pdharms | url-status = live | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170217233154/http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1004&context=pdharms | archive-date = 17 February 2017 }}</ref> In clinical settings, prevalence estimates range from 1% to 15%.<ref name=":0" /><ref name="Sed2009">{{cite book | vauthors = Sederer LI |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7_7-5dQIpBQC&pg=PA29 |title=Blueprints Psychiatry |date=2009 |publisher=Wolters Kluwer/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins |isbn=978-0781782531 |edition=Fifth |location=Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |page=29 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170111195341/https://books.google.com/books?id=7_7-5dQIpBQC&pg=PA29 |archive-date=11 January 2017 |url-status=live |via=Google Books |df=dmy-all}}</ref> The occurrence of narcissistic personality disorder presents a high rate of [[comorbidity]] with other mental disorders.<ref name="Paris" />


== History ==
== History ==
The term "narcissism" comes from a first century (written in the year 8 AD) book by the Roman poet [[Ovid]]. [[Metamorphoses]] Book III is a myth about two main characters, [[Narcissus (mythology)|Narcissus]] and [[Echo (mythology)|Echo]]. Narcissus is a handsome young man who spurns the advances of many potential lovers. When Narcissus rejects the nymph Echo, named this way because she was cursed to only echo the sounds that others made, the gods punish him by making him fall in love with his own reflection in a pool of water. When Narcissus discovers that the object of his love cannot love him back, he slowly pines away and dies.<ref name="Britanica">{{cite web |title=Narcissus Greek mythology |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Narcissus-Greek-mythology |website=britannica.com |publisher=Britanica |access-date=14 September 2021}}</ref>
The term "narcissism" comes from a first century (written in the year 8 AD) book by the Roman poet [[Ovid]]. [[Metamorphoses]] Book III is a myth about two main characters, [[Narcissus (mythology)|Narcissus]] and [[Echo (mythology)|Echo]]. Narcissus is a handsome young man who spurns the advances of many potential lovers. When Narcissus rejects the nymph Echo, named this way because she was cursed to only echo the sounds that others made, the gods punish him by making him fall in love with his own reflection in a pool of water. When Narcissus discovers that the object of his love cannot love him back, he slowly pines away and dies.<ref name="Britanica">{{cite web |title=Narcissus Greek mythology |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Narcissus-Greek-mythology |website=britannica.com |publisher=Britanica |access-date=14 September 2021}}</ref>


The concept of excessive [[selfishness]] has been recognized throughout history. In ancient Greece, the concept was understood as [[hubris]]. It is only since the late 1800s that narcissism has been defined in psychological terms:<ref name="millon">{{cite book|last1=Millon|first1=Theodore|last2= Grossman|first2= Seth|last3= Million |first3 = Carrie|last4= Meagher|first4= Sarah|last5=Ramnath|first5=Rowena|publisher = Wiley|isbn = 978-0471237341|page = 343|url = http://leipper.org/manuals/zip-fill/Personality%20Disorders%20in%20Modern%20Life%202ND%20ED%20-%20THEODORE%20MILLON.pdf|title=Personality Disorders in Modern Life|year=2004}}</ref>
The concept of excessive [[selfishness]] has been recognized throughout history. In ancient Greece, the concept was understood as [[hubris]]. It is only since the late 1800s that narcissism has been defined in psychological terms:<ref name="millon">{{cite book| vauthors = Millon T, Grossman S, Millon C, Meagher S, Ramnath R |publisher = Wiley|isbn = 978-0471237341|page = 343|url = http://leipper.org/manuals/zip-fill/Personality%20Disorders%20in%20Modern%20Life%202ND%20ED%20-%20THEODORE%20MILLON.pdf|title=Personality Disorders in Modern Life|year=2004}}</ref>


*'''[[Havelock Ellis]]''' (1898) was the first psychologist to use the term when he linked the myth to the condition in one of his patients.<ref name="millon" />
*'''[[Havelock Ellis]]''' (1898) was the first psychologist to use the term when he linked the myth to the condition in one of his patients.<ref name="millon" />
*'''[[Sigmund Freud]]''' (1905-1953) used the terms "narcissistic libido" in his [[Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality]].<ref name="freud1">{{citation|url=http://www.english.hawaii.edu/criticalink/narc/guide1.html|title=Freud: On Narcissism|year=1998|website = CriticaLink|last= Zuern|first = John David|publisher = University of Hawaii}}.</ref><ref name="millon" />
*'''[[Sigmund Freud]]''' (1905-1953) used the terms "narcissistic libido" in his [[Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality]].<ref name="freud1">{{citation|url=http://www.english.hawaii.edu/criticalink/narc/guide1.html|title=Freud: On Narcissism|year=1998|website = CriticaLink| vauthors = Zuern JD |publisher = University of Hawaii}}.</ref><ref name="millon" />
*'''[[Ernest Jones]]''' (1913/1951) was the first to construe extreme narcissism as a character flaw.
*'''[[Ernest Jones]]''' (1913/1951) was the first to construe extreme narcissism as a character flaw.
*'''[[Robert Waelder]]''' (1925) published the first case study of narcissism. His patient was a successful scientist with an attitude of superiority, an obsession with fostering self-respect, and a lack of normal feelings of guilt. The patient was aloof and independent from others and had an inability to empathize with others situations, and was selfish sexually. Waelder's patient was also overly logical and analytical and valued abstract intellectual thought (thinking for thinking's sake) over the practical application of scientific knowledge.
*'''[[Robert Waelder]]''' (1925) published the first case study of narcissism. His patient was a successful scientist with an attitude of superiority, an obsession with fostering self-respect, and a lack of normal feelings of guilt. The patient was aloof and independent from others and had an inability to empathize with others situations, and was selfish sexually. Waelder's patient was also overly logical and analytical and valued abstract intellectual thought (thinking for thinking's sake) over the practical application of scientific knowledge.


[[Narcissism|Narcissistic personality]] was first described by the psychoanalyst [[Robert Waelder]] in 1925.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Waelder |first=Robert |date=1925 |title=The psychoses: Their mechanisms and accessibility to influence |journal=International Journal of Psycho-Analysis |volume=6 |pages=259–281}}</ref> The term ''narcissistic personality disorder'' (NPD) was coined by [[Heinz Kohut]] in 1968.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=O'Donohue |first1=William T. |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/77716529 |title=Personality disorders : toward the DSM-V |last2=Fowler |first2=Katherine A. |last3=Lilienfeld |first3=Scott O. |date=2007 |publisher=Sage Publications |isbn=978-1412904223 |location=Los Angeles |page=235 |oclc=77716529}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Kohut |first=Heinz |author-link=Heinz Kohut |date=1968 |title=The psychoanalytic treatment of narcissisticppersonality disorders. Outline of a systematic approach |url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/5759031 |journal=The Psychoanalytic Study of the Child |location=Oxfordshire, England |publisher=[[Taylor & Francis]] |volume=23 |pages=86–113 |doi=10.1080/00797308.1968.11822951 |issn=0079-7308 |pmid=5759031}}</ref> Waelder's initial study has been influential in the way narcissism and the clinical disorder Narcissistic personality disorder are defined today<ref name="Bergmann">{{cite book |last1=Bergmann |first1=Martin S. |title=''Anatomy of Loving; Man's Quest to Know what Love'' I |date=1987 |publisher=Ballantine Books |isbn=978-0449905531}}</ref>
[[Narcissism|Narcissistic personality]] was first described by the psychoanalyst [[Robert Waelder]] in 1925.<ref>{{Cite journal | vauthors = Waelder R |date=1925 |title=The psychoses: Their mechanisms and accessibility to influence |journal=International Journal of Psycho-Analysis |volume=6 |pages=259–281}}</ref> The term ''narcissistic personality disorder'' (NPD) was coined by [[Heinz Kohut]] in 1968.<ref>{{Cite book | vauthors = O'Donohue WT, Fowler KA, Lilienfeld SO |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/77716529 |title=Personality disorders : toward the DSM-V |date=2007 |publisher=Sage Publications |isbn=978-1412904223 |location=Los Angeles |page=235 |oclc=77716529}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Kohut H | title = The psychoanalytic treatment of narcissisticppersonality disorders. Outline of a systematic approach | journal = The Psychoanalytic Study of the Child | volume = 23 | pages = 86–113 | date = 1968 | pmid = 5759031 | doi = 10.1080/00797308.1968.11822951 | publisher = [[Taylor & Francis]] | author-link = Heinz Kohut }}</ref> Waelder's initial study has been influential in the way narcissism and the clinical disorder Narcissistic personality disorder are defined today<ref name="Bergmann">{{cite book | vauthors = Bergmann MS |title=''Anatomy of Loving; Man's Quest to Know what Love'' I |date=1987 |publisher=Ballantine Books |isbn=978-0449905531}}</ref>


=== Freudianism and psychoanalysis ===
=== Freudianism and psychoanalysis ===
Much early history of narcissism and NPD originates from [[psychoanalysis]]. Regarding the adult [[Neuroticism|neurotic]]'s sense of omnipotence, [[Sigmund Freud]] said that "this belief is a frank acknowledgement of a relic of the old megalomania of infancy";<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Freud|first1=Sigmund|authorlink=Sigmund Freud|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/490712192|title=Case Histories II|last2=Richards|first2=Angela|last3=Strachey|first3=James|date=1990|publisher=[[Penguin Books]]|isbn=978-0140137996|location=London, England|pages=113|language=English|oclc=490712192}}</ref> and concluded that: "we can detect an element of megalomania in most other forms of [[Paranoia|paranoic disorder]]. We are justified in assuming that this megalomania is essentially of an infantile nature, and that, as development proceeds, it is sacrificed to social considerations."<ref>Freud, p. 203.</ref>
Much early history of narcissism and NPD originates from [[psychoanalysis]]. Regarding the adult [[Neuroticism|neurotic]]'s sense of omnipotence, [[Sigmund Freud]] said that "this belief is a frank acknowledgement of a relic of the old megalomania of infancy";<ref>{{Cite book| vauthors = Freud S, Richards A, Strachey J |authorlink=Sigmund Freud|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/490712192|title=Case Histories II|date=1990|publisher=[[Penguin Books]]|isbn=978-0140137996|location=London, England|pages=113|language=English|oclc=490712192}}</ref> and concluded that: "we can detect an element of megalomania in most other forms of [[Paranoia|paranoic disorder]]. We are justified in assuming that this megalomania is essentially of an infantile nature, and that, as development proceeds, it is sacrificed to social considerations."<ref>Freud, p. 203.</ref>


''[[Narcissistic injury]]'' and ''narcissistic scar'' are terms used by Freud in the 1920s. ''Narcissistic wound'' and ''narcissistic blow'' are other, almost interchangeable, terms.<ref>{{cite book|first=Salman|last=Akhtar|authorlink=Salman Akhtar|title=Comprehensive Dictionary of Psychoanalysis|publisher=[[Routledge]]|location=Abingdon, England|date=2018|origyear=2009|isbn=978-1-85575-471-3|page=182}}</ref> When wounded in the ego, either by a real or a perceived criticism, a narcissistic person's displays of anger can be disproportionate to the nature of the criticism suffered;<ref name="mayo1" /> but typically, the actions and responses of the NPD person are deliberate and calculated.<ref name="DSM5" /> Despite occasional flare-ups of personal insecurity, the inflated self-concept of the NPD person is primarily stable.<ref name="DSM5" />
''[[Narcissistic injury]]'' and ''narcissistic scar'' are terms used by Freud in the 1920s. ''Narcissistic wound'' and ''narcissistic blow'' are other, almost interchangeable, terms.<ref>{{cite book| vauthors = Akhtar S |authorlink=Salman Akhtar|title=Comprehensive Dictionary of Psychoanalysis|publisher=[[Routledge]]|location=Abingdon, England|date=2018|origyear=2009|isbn=978-1-85575-471-3|page=182}}</ref> When wounded in the ego, either by a real or a perceived criticism, a narcissistic person's displays of anger can be disproportionate to the nature of the criticism suffered;<ref name="mayo1" /> but typically, the actions and responses of the NPD person are deliberate and calculated.<ref name="DSM5" /> Despite occasional flare-ups of personal insecurity, the inflated self-concept of the NPD person is primarily stable.<ref name="DSM5" />


In ''The Psychology of Gambling'' (1957), [[Edmund Bergler]] considered megalomania to be a normal occurrence in the psychology of a child,<ref>{{cite book|first=Edmund|last=Bergler|authorlink=Edmund Bergler|title=The Psychology of Gambling|editor1-first=Jon|editor1-last=Halliday|editor2-first=Peter|editor2-last=Fuller|publisher=[[International Universities Press]]|location=London, England|date=1974|isbn=978-1111916336|pages=176, 182}}</ref> a condition later reactivated in adult life, if the individual takes up gambling.<ref>Robert M. Lindner, "The Psychodynamics of Gambling", in Halliday/Fuller eds., p. 220.</ref> In ''The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis'' (1946), [[Otto Fenichel]] said that people who, in their later lives, respond with denial to their own narcissistic injury usually undergo a similar [[Regression (psychology)|regression]] to the megalomania of childhood.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Fenichel|first=Otto|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/960836519|title=Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis |date=2016|publisher=[[Taylor & Francis]] |location=Abingdon, England|isbn=978-1138147829|pages=420|language=English|oclc=960836519}}</ref>
In ''The Psychology of Gambling'' (1957), [[Edmund Bergler]] considered megalomania to be a normal occurrence in the psychology of a child,<ref>{{cite book| vauthors = Bergler E |authorlink=Edmund Bergler|title=The Psychology of Gambling| veditors = Halliday J, Fuller P |publisher=[[International Universities Press]]|location=London, England|date=1974|isbn=978-1111916336|pages=176, 182}}</ref> a condition later reactivated in adult life, if the individual takes up gambling.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Lindner RM | title = The Psychodynamics of Gambling | journal = The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science | date = May 1950 | volume = 269 | issue = 1 | pages = 93-107 | doi = 10.1177/000271625026900114 }}</ref> In ''The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis'' (1946), [[Otto Fenichel]] said that people who, in their later lives, respond with denial to their own narcissistic injury usually undergo a similar [[Regression (psychology)|regression]] to the megalomania of childhood.<ref>{{Cite book| vauthors = Fenichel O |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/960836519|title=Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis |date=2016|publisher=[[Taylor & Francis]] |location=Abingdon, England|isbn=978-1138147829|pages=420|language=English|oclc=960836519}}</ref>


==== Narcissistic supply ====
==== Narcissistic supply ====
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==== Narcissistic rage ====
==== Narcissistic rage ====
The term ''narcissistic rage'' was a concept introduced by [[Heinz Kohut]] in 1972. Narcissistic rage was theorised as a reaction to a perceived threat to a narcissist's [[self-esteem]] or self-worth. Narcissistic rage occurs on a continuum from aloofness, to expressions of mild irritation or annoyance, to serious outbursts, including violent attacks.<ref name="isbn1-58562-204-4">{{cite book |first=Carl P.|last=Malmquist |title=Homicide: A Psychiatric Perspective |publisher=[[American Psychiatric Association]]|location=Washington, D.C.|year=2006 |isbn=978-1585622047 |pages=181–82}}</ref>
The term ''narcissistic rage'' was a concept introduced by [[Heinz Kohut]] in 1972. Narcissistic rage was theorised as a reaction to a perceived threat to a narcissist's [[self-esteem]] or self-worth. Narcissistic rage occurs on a continuum from aloofness, to expressions of mild irritation or annoyance, to serious outbursts, including violent attacks.<ref name="isbn1-58562-204-4">{{cite book | vauthors = Malmquist CP |title=Homicide: A Psychiatric Perspective |publisher=[[American Psychiatric Association]]|location=Washington, D.C.|year=2006 |isbn=978-1585622047 |pages=181–82}}</ref>


Narcissistic rage reactions are not necessarily limited to narcissistic personality disorder. They may also be seen in [[catatonic]], [[paranoid delusion]], and depressive episodes.<ref name="isbn1-58562-204-4" /> It was later suggested that narcissistic people have two layers of rage; the first layer of rage being directed constant anger towards someone else, with the second layer being [[Self-deprecation|self-deprecating]].<ref>{{cite book|first=Sam|last=Vaknin|authorlink=Sam Vaknin|title=Malignant Self Love: Narcissism Revisited|date=2003|origyear=1999|isbn=8023833847|page=191}}</ref>
Narcissistic rage reactions are not necessarily limited to narcissistic personality disorder. They may also be seen in [[catatonic]], [[paranoid delusion]], and depressive episodes.<ref name="isbn1-58562-204-4" /> It was later suggested that narcissistic people have two layers of rage; the first layer of rage being directed constant anger towards someone else, with the second layer being [[Self-deprecation|self-deprecating]].<ref>{{cite book| vauthors = Vaknin S |authorlink=Sam Vaknin|title=Malignant Self Love: Narcissism Revisited|date=2003|origyear=1999|isbn=8023833847|page=191}}</ref>


=== Object relations ===
=== Object relations ===
In the second half of the 20th century, in contrast to Freud's perspective of megalomania as an obstacle to psychoanalysis, in the US and UK [[Melanie Klein|Kleinian]] psychologists used the [[object relations theory]] to re-evaluate megalomania as a [[defence mechanisms|defence mechanism]].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Hughes|first=Judith M|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/57488252|title=From obstacle to ally: the evolution of psychoanalytic practice|date=2004|publisher=Brunner-Routledge|isbn=978-1583918906|location=New York|pages=175|language=English|oclc=57488252}}</ref> This Kleinian therapeutic approach built upon [[Heinz Kohut]]'s view of narcissistic megalomania as an aspect of normal mental development, by contrast with [[Otto Kernberg]]'s consideration of such grandiosity as a pathological distortion of normal psychological development.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Hughes|first=Judith M|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/57488252|title=From obstacle to ally: the evolution of psychoanalytic practice|date=2004|publisher=Brunner-Routledge|isbn=978-1583918906|location=New York|pages=149|language=English|oclc=57488252}}</ref>
In the second half of the 20th century, in contrast to Freud's perspective of megalomania as an obstacle to psychoanalysis, in the US and UK [[Melanie Klein|Kleinian]] psychologists used the [[object relations theory]] to re-evaluate megalomania as a [[defence mechanisms|defence mechanism]].<ref>{{Cite book| vauthors = Hughes JM |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/57488252|title=From obstacle to ally: the evolution of psychoanalytic practice|date=2004|publisher=Brunner-Routledge|isbn=978-1583918906|location=New York|pages=175|language=English|oclc=57488252}}</ref> This Kleinian therapeutic approach built upon [[Heinz Kohut]]'s view of narcissistic megalomania as an aspect of normal mental development, by contrast with [[Otto Kernberg]]'s consideration of such grandiosity as a pathological distortion of normal psychological development.<ref>{{Cite book| vauthors = Hughes JM |url= https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/57488252|title=From obstacle to ally: the evolution of psychoanalytic practice|date=2004|publisher=Brunner-Routledge|isbn=978-1583918906|location=New York|pages=149|language=English|oclc=57488252}}</ref>


To the extent that people are pathologically narcissistic, the person with NPD can be a self-absorbed individual who passes blame by [[psychological projection]] and is intolerant of contradictory views and opinions; is apathetic towards the emotional, mental, and psychological needs of other people; and is indifferent to the negative effects of their behaviors, whilst insisting that people should see them as an ideal person.{{Citation needed|date=May 2022}} The merging of the terms "inflated self-concept" and "actual self''"'' is evident in later research on the grandiosity component of narcissistic personality disorder, along with incorporating the defence mechanisms of [[idealization and devaluation]] and of [[denial]].<ref name="pmid16937998">{{Cite journal |last=Siegel |first=Judith P. |date=September 2006 |title=Dyadic splitting in partner relational disorders |url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16937998 |journal=Journal of Family Psychology |volume=20 |issue=3 |pages=418–22 |doi=10.1037/0893-3200.20.3.418 |issn=0893-3200 |pmid=16937998}}</ref>
To the extent that people are pathologically narcissistic, the person with NPD can be a self-absorbed individual who passes blame by [[psychological projection]] and is intolerant of contradictory views and opinions; is apathetic towards the emotional, mental, and psychological needs of other people; and is indifferent to the negative effects of their behaviors, whilst insisting that people should see them as an ideal person.{{Citation needed|date=May 2022}} The merging of the terms "inflated self-concept" and "actual self''"'' is evident in later research on the grandiosity component of narcissistic personality disorder, along with incorporating the defence mechanisms of [[idealization and devaluation]] and of [[denial]].<ref name="pmid16937998">{{cite journal | vauthors = Siegel JP | title = Dyadic splitting in partner relational disorders | journal = Journal of Family Psychology | volume = 20 | issue = 3 | pages = 418–422 | date = September 2006 | pmid = 16937998 | doi = 10.1037/0893-3200.20.3.418 }}</ref>


=== Comparison to other personality disorders ===
=== Comparison to other personality disorders ===
NPD shares properties with [[borderline personality disorder]], including [[social stigma]], unclear causes and prevalence rates. In a 2020 study, it was argued that NPD is following a similar historical trend to borderline personality disorder: "In the past three decades, enormous progress has been made to elucidate the psychopathology, longitudinal course, and effective treatment for BPD. NPD, which remains as similarly stigmatized and poorly understood as BPD once was, now carries the potential for a new wave of investigation and treatment development."<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Choi-Kain |first=Lois |date=March 2020 |title=Commentary on the Special Issue: Narcissistic Personality Disorder: A Coming of Age |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1521/pedi.2020.34.supp.210 |journal=Journal of Personality Disorders |volume=34 |issue=Supplement |pages=210–213 |doi=10.1521/pedi.2020.34.supp.210 |pmid=32186984 |s2cid=214583509 |issn=0885-579X}}</ref>
NPD shares properties with [[borderline personality disorder]], including [[social stigma]], unclear causes and prevalence rates. In a 2020 study, it was argued that NPD is following a similar historical trend to borderline personality disorder: "In the past three decades, enormous progress has been made to elucidate the psychopathology, longitudinal course, and effective treatment for BPD. NPD, which remains as similarly stigmatized and poorly understood as BPD once was, now carries the potential for a new wave of investigation and treatment development."<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Choi-Kain L | title = Commentary on the Special Issue: Narcissistic Personality Disorder: A Coming of Age | journal = Journal of Personality Disorders | volume = 34 | issue = Suppl | pages = 210–213 | date = March 2020 | pmid = 32186984 | doi = 10.1521/pedi.2020.34.supp.210 | s2cid = 214583509 }}</ref>


However, NPD also shares some commonality with the now discredited "multiple personality disorder" (MPD) personality constellation in popular culture and clinical lore. MPD received a high level of mainstream media attention the 1980s, followed by a nearly complete removal from public discourse within the following two decades; this was in part due to thorough debunking many of its propositions and the evident societal harm created by its entry into the legal defence realm. Similar to MPD, NPD has been the subject of high levels of preoccupation in social and popular media forums, without a firm empirical basis despite over a century of description in clinical lore. The NPD label may be misused colloquially and clinically to disparage a target for the purpose of buttressing one's own self-esteem, or other motives that are detrimental for the person receiving the label. Finally, the rise in popular interest in NPD is not accompanied by hypothesized increases in narcissism among recent generations despite widespread assumptions to the contrary.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Wetzel |first1=E |last2=Brown |first2=A |last3=Hill |first3=PL |last4=Chung |first4=JM |last5=Robins |first5=RW |last6=Roberts |first6=BW |title=The Narcissism Epidemic Is Dead; Long Live the Narcissism Epidemic. |journal=Psychological Science |date=December 2017 |volume=28 |issue=12 |pages=1833–1847 |doi=10.1177/0956797617724208 |pmid=29065280|s2cid=10073811 |url=https://kar.kent.ac.uk/62391/1/Wetzel_et_al_%28in_press%29_The_narcissism_epidemic_is_dead_long_live_the_narcissism_epidemic_final_accepted_version.pdf }}</ref>
However, NPD also shares some commonality with the now discredited "multiple personality disorder" (MPD) personality constellation in popular culture and clinical lore. MPD received a high level of mainstream media attention the 1980s, followed by a nearly complete removal from public discourse within the following two decades; this was in part due to thorough debunking many of its propositions and the evident societal harm created by its entry into the legal defence realm. Similar to MPD, NPD has been the subject of high levels of preoccupation in social and popular media forums, without a firm empirical basis despite over a century of description in clinical lore. The NPD label may be misused colloquially and clinically to disparage a target for the purpose of buttressing one's own self-esteem, or other motives that are detrimental for the person receiving the label. Finally, the rise in popular interest in NPD is not accompanied by hypothesized increases in narcissism among recent generations despite widespread assumptions to the contrary.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Wetzel E, Brown A, Hill PL, Chung JM, Robins RW, Roberts BW | title = The Narcissism Epidemic Is Dead; Long Live the Narcissism Epidemic | journal = Psychological Science | volume = 28 | issue = 12 | pages = 1833–1847 | date = December 2017 | pmid = 29065280 | doi = 10.1177/0956797617724208 | s2cid = 10073811 }}</ref>


== Controversy ==
== Controversy ==
The extent of controversy about narcissism was on display when the committee on personality disorders for the 5th Edition (2013) of the [[Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders]] recommended the removal of Narcissistic Personality from the manual. A contentious three-year debate unfolded in the clinical community with one of the sharpest critics being [[John G. Gunderson|John Gunderson]], who led the DSM personality disorders committee for the 4th edition of the manual.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Zanor|first1=Charles|title=A Fate That Narcissists Will Hate: Being Ignored|work=[[The New York Times]]|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/30/health/views/30mind.html|access-date=9 November 2010}}</ref>
The extent of controversy about narcissism was on display when the committee on personality disorders for the 5th Edition (2013) of the [[Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders]] recommended the removal of Narcissistic Personality from the manual. A contentious three-year debate unfolded in the clinical community with one of the sharpest critics being [[John G. Gunderson|John Gunderson]], who led the DSM personality disorders committee for the 4th edition of the manual.<ref>{{cite news| vauthors = Zanor C |title=A Fate That Narcissists Will Hate: Being Ignored |work=[[The New York Times]] |url= https://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/30/health/views/30mind.html |access-date=9 November 2010}}</ref>


The [[American Psychiatric Association]]'s (APA) formulation, description, and definition of narcissistic personality disorder, as published in the [[DSM-IV-TR|''Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders'', Fourth Ed., Text Revision]] (DSM-IV-TR, 2000), was criticised by clinicians as inadequately describing the range and complexity of the personality disorder that is NPD. That it is excessively focused upon "the narcissistic individual's external, symptomatic, or social interpersonal patterns – at the expense of ... internal complexity and individual suffering", which reduced the clinical utility of the NPD definition in the DSM-IV-TR.<ref name="ronningstam">{{Cite journal|last=Ronningstam|first=Elsa|date=February 2010|title=Narcissistic personality disorder: a current review|url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20425313|journal=Current Psychiatry Reports|volume=12|issue=1|pages=68–75|doi=10.1007/s11920-009-0084-z|issn=1535-1645|pmid=20425313|s2cid=19473736}}</ref>
The [[American Psychiatric Association]]'s (APA) formulation, description, and definition of narcissistic personality disorder, as published in the [[DSM-IV-TR|''Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders'', Fourth Ed., Text Revision]] (DSM-IV-TR, 2000), was criticised by clinicians as inadequately describing the range and complexity of the personality disorder that is NPD. That it is excessively focused upon "the narcissistic individual's external, symptomatic, or social interpersonal patterns – at the expense of ... internal complexity and individual suffering", which reduced the clinical utility of the NPD definition in the DSM-IV-TR.<ref name="ronningstam">{{cite journal | vauthors = Ronningstam E | title = Narcissistic personality disorder: a current review | journal = Current Psychiatry Reports | volume = 12 | issue = 1 | pages = 68–75 | date = February 2010 | pmid = 20425313 | doi = 10.1007/s11920-009-0084-z | s2cid = 19473736 }}</ref>


In revising the diagnostic criteria for personality disorders, the work group for the list of "Personality and Personality Disorders" proposed the elimination of narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) as a distinct entry in the DSM-5, and thus replaced a categorical approach to NPD with a dimensional approach, which is based upon the severity of the dysfunctional-personality-trait domains.<ref>{{cite web|title=DSM-5: Proposed Revisions: Personality and Personality Disorders|date=2010-02-13|publisher=American Psychiatric Association|url=http://www.dsm5.org/ProposedRevisions/Pages/PersonalityandPersonalityDisorders.aspx|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101203170307/http://www.dsm5.org/PROPOSEDREVISIONS/Pages/PersonalityandPersonalityDisorders.aspx|archive-date=3 December 2010|df=dmy-all}}</ref><ref name="pmid20223959">{{Cite journal|last=Holden|first=Constance|date=2010-03-12|title=Psychiatry. APA seeks to overhaul personality disorder diagnoses|url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20223959|journal=Science|volume=327|issue=5971|pages=1314|doi=10.1126/science.327.5971.1314|issn=1095-9203|pmid=20223959}}</ref> Clinicians critical of the DSM-5 revision characterized the new diagnostic system as an "unwieldy conglomeration of disparate models that cannot happily coexist", which is of limited usefulness in clinical practice.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Shedler|first1=Jonathan|last2=Beck|first2=Aaron|last3=Fonagy|first3=Peter|last4=Gabbard|first4=Glen O.|last5=Gunderson|first5=John|last6=Kernberg|first6=Otto|last7=Michels|first7=Robert|last8=Westen|first8=Drew|date=September 2010|title=Personality disorders in DSM-5|url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20826853|journal=The American Journal of Psychiatry|volume=167|issue=9|pages=1026–1028|doi=10.1176/appi.ajp.2010.10050746|issn=1535-7228|pmid=20826853}}</ref> Despite the reintroduction of the NPD entry, the APA's re-formulation, re-description, and re-definition of NPD, towards a dimensional view based upon personality traits, remains in the list of personality disorders of the DSM-5.
In revising the diagnostic criteria for personality disorders, the work group for the list of "Personality and Personality Disorders" proposed the elimination of narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) as a distinct entry in the DSM-5, and thus replaced a categorical approach to NPD with a dimensional approach, which is based upon the severity of the dysfunctional-personality-trait domains.<ref>{{cite web|title=DSM-5: Proposed Revisions: Personality and Personality Disorders|date=2010-02-13|publisher=American Psychiatric Association|url=http://www.dsm5.org/ProposedRevisions/Pages/PersonalityandPersonalityDisorders.aspx|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101203170307/http://www.dsm5.org/PROPOSEDREVISIONS/Pages/PersonalityandPersonalityDisorders.aspx|archive-date=3 December 2010|df=dmy-all}}</ref><ref name="pmid20223959">{{cite journal | vauthors = Holden C | title = Psychiatry. APA seeks to overhaul personality disorder diagnoses | journal = Science | volume = 327 | issue = 5971 | pages = 1314 | date = March 2010 | pmid = 20223959 | doi = 10.1126/science.327.5971.1314 }}</ref> Clinicians critical of the DSM-5 revision characterized the new diagnostic system as an "unwieldy conglomeration of disparate models that cannot happily coexist", which is of limited usefulness in clinical practice.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Shedler J, Beck A, Fonagy P, Gabbard GO, Gunderson J, Kernberg O, Michels R, Westen D | display-authors = 6 | title = Personality disorders in DSM-5 | journal = The American Journal of Psychiatry | volume = 167 | issue = 9 | pages = 1026–1028 | date = September 2010 | pmid = 20826853 | doi = 10.1176/appi.ajp.2010.10050746 }}</ref> Despite the reintroduction of the NPD entry, the APA's re-formulation, re-description, and re-definition of NPD, towards a dimensional view based upon personality traits, remains in the list of personality disorders of the DSM-5.


A 2011 study concluded that narcissism should be conceived as personality dimensions pertinent to the full range of personality disorders, rather than as a distinct diagnostic category.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Karterud|first1=Sigmund|last2=Øien|first2=Maria|last3=Pedersen|first3=Geir|date=September 2011|title=Validity aspects of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, narcissistic personality disorder construct|url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21193181|journal=Comprehensive Psychiatry|volume=52|issue=5|pages=517–26|doi=10.1016/j.comppsych.2010.11.001|issn=1532-8384|pmid=21193181}}</ref> In a 2012 literature review about NPD, the researchers concluded that narcissistic personality disorder "shows [[nosological]] inconsistency, and that its consideration as a trait domain needed further research would be strongly beneficial to the field."<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Alarcón|first1=Renato D.|last2=Sarabia|first2=Silvana|date=January 2012|title=Debates on the narcissism conundrum: trait, domain, dimension, type, or disorder?|url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22210358|journal=The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease|volume=200|issue=1|pages=16–25|doi=10.1097/NMD.0b013e31823e6795|issn=1539-736X|pmid=22210358|s2cid=24405066}}</ref> In a 2018 [[latent structure analysis]], results suggested that the DSM-5 NPD criteria fail to distinguish some aspects of narcissism relevant to diagnosis of NPD and subclinical narcissism.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Aslinger |first1=Elizabeth N. |last2=Manuck |first2=Stephen N. |last3=Pilkonis |first3=Paul A. |last4=Simms |first4=Leonard |last5=Wright |first5=Aidan G.C. |date=2018-04-18 |title=Narcissist or Narcissistic? Evaluation of the Latent Structure of Narcissistic Personality Disorder |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/tv7r9 |access-date=2022-05-01 |journal=Journal of Abnormal Psychology|volume=127 |issue=5 |pages=496–502 |doi=10.31234/osf.io/tv7r9 |pmid=30010367 |pmc=6051431 }}</ref>
A 2011 study concluded that narcissism should be conceived as personality dimensions pertinent to the full range of personality disorders, rather than as a distinct diagnostic category.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Karterud S, Øien M, Pedersen G | title = Validity aspects of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, narcissistic personality disorder construct | journal = Comprehensive Psychiatry | volume = 52 | issue = 5 | pages = 517–526 | date = September 2011 | pmid = 21193181 | doi = 10.1016/j.comppsych.2010.11.001 }}</ref> In a 2012 literature review about NPD, the researchers concluded that narcissistic personality disorder "shows [[nosological]] inconsistency, and that its consideration as a trait domain needed further research would be strongly beneficial to the field."<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Alarcón RD, Sarabia S | title = Debates on the narcissism conundrum: trait, domain, dimension, type, or disorder? | journal = The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | volume = 200 | issue = 1 | pages = 16–25 | date = January 2012 | pmid = 22210358 | doi = 10.1097/NMD.0b013e31823e6795 | s2cid = 24405066 }}</ref> In a 2018 [[latent structure analysis]], results suggested that the DSM-5 NPD criteria fail to distinguish some aspects of narcissism relevant to diagnosis of NPD and subclinical narcissism.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Aslinger EN, Manuck SB, Pilkonis PA, Simms LJ, Wright AG | title = Narcissist or narcissistic? Evaluation of the latent structure of narcissistic personality disorder | journal = Journal of Abnormal Psychology | volume = 127 | issue = 5 | pages = 496–502 | date = July 2018 | pmid = 30010367 | pmc = 6051431 | doi = 10.31234/osf.io/tv7r9 }}</ref>


==In popular culture==
==In popular culture==
* [[To Die For#Cast|Suzanne Stone-Maretto]], [[Nicole Kidman]]'s character in the film ''[[To Die For]]'' (1995), wants to appear on television at all costs, even if this involves murdering her husband. A psychiatric assessment of her character noted that she "was seen as a prototypical narcissistic person by the raters: on average, she satisfied 8 of 9 criteria for narcissistic personality disorder... had she been evaluated for personality disorders, she would receive a diagnosis of narcissistic personality disorder".<ref>{{cite journal|last=Hesse|first=Morten|author2=Schliewe S |author3=Thomsen RR |year=2005|title=Rating of personality disorder features in popular movie characters|journal=BMC Psychiatry|volume=5|pmid=16336663|pmc=1325244|doi=10.1186/1471-244X-5-45|page=45|issue=1}}</ref>
* [[To Die For#Cast|Suzanne Stone-Maretto]], [[Nicole Kidman]]'s character in the film ''[[To Die For]]'' (1995), wants to appear on television at all costs, even if this involves murdering her husband. A psychiatric assessment of her character noted that she "was seen as a prototypical narcissistic person by the raters: on average, she satisfied 8 of 9 criteria for narcissistic personality disorder... had she been evaluated for personality disorders, she would receive a diagnosis of narcissistic personality disorder".<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Hesse M, Schliewe S, Thomsen RR | title = Rating of personality disorder features in popular movie characters | journal = BMC Psychiatry | volume = 5 | issue = 1 | pages = 45 | date = December 2005 | pmid = 16336663 | pmc = 1325244 | doi = 10.1186/1471-244X-5-45 }}</ref>
* [[Jay Gatsby]], the eponymous character of [[F. Scott Fitzgerald]]'s novel ''[[The Great Gatsby]]'' (1925), "an archetype of self-made American men seeking to join [[Upper class|high society]]", has been described as a "pathological narcissist" for whom the "[[Ego ideal|ego-ideal]]" has become "inflated and destructive" and whose "grandiose lies, poor sense of reality, sense of entitlement, and exploitive treatment of others" conspire toward his own demise.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://fitzgerald.narod.ru/critics-eng/mitchell-narcissist.html|title=The Great Narcissist: A Study of Fitzgerald's Gatsby, by Giles Mitchell.|first=Giles|last=Mitchell|website=fitzgerald.narod.ru|access-date=22 October 2017}}</ref>
* [[Jay Gatsby]], the eponymous character of [[F. Scott Fitzgerald]]'s novel ''[[The Great Gatsby]]'' (1925), "an archetype of self-made American men seeking to join [[Upper class|high society]]", has been described as a "pathological narcissist" for whom the "[[Ego ideal|ego-ideal]]" has become "inflated and destructive" and whose "grandiose lies, poor sense of reality, sense of entitlement, and exploitive treatment of others" conspire toward his own demise.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://fitzgerald.narod.ru/critics-eng/mitchell-narcissist.html|title=The Great Narcissist: A Study of Fitzgerald's Gatsby, by Giles Mitchell.| vauthors = Mitchell G |website=fitzgerald.narod.ru|access-date=22 October 2017}}</ref>


== See also ==
== See also ==
Line 283: Line 283:
== Further reading ==
== Further reading ==
{{refbegin|30em}}
{{refbegin|30em}}
* [[Alexander Lowen|Lowen, Alexander]], ''Narcissism: Denial of the True Self'' (1984)
* {{cite book | vauthors = Lowen A | author-link = Alexander Lowen |title=Narcissism : denial of the true self |date=1997 |publisher=Simon & Schuster |location=New York |isbn=978-0-7432-5543-1}}
*{{cite book | vauthors = Malkin C |title=Rethinking narcissism: the bad-and surprising good-about feeling special |date=2015 |location=New York, NY | publisher = Harper Wave |isbn=978-0-06-234810-4}}
* Malkin, Craig, ''Rethinking Narcissism'', Harper Wave 2016
* {{cite book|last1=Masterson|first1=James F.|title=The Narcissistic and Borderline Disorders: An Integrated Developmental Approach|publisher=Routledge|location=London|doi=10.4324/9780203776148|lccn=81038540|year=1981|isbn=978-0876302927}}
* {{cite book| vauthors = Masterson JF |title=The Narcissistic and Borderline Disorders: An Integrated Developmental Approach|publisher=Routledge|location=London|doi=10.4324/9780203776148|lccn=81038540|year=1981|isbn=978-0876302927}}
* Morrison, Andrew P., ''Essential Papers on Narcissism'' (Essential Papers in Psychoanalysis) (1986)
* {{cite book | vauthors = Morrison AP |title=Essential papers on narcissism | series = Essential Papers in Psychoanalysis | volume = 13 |date=1986 |publisher=New York University Press |location=New York |isbn=978-0-8147-5395-8 }}
* Morrison, Andrew P., ''Shame: The Underside of Narcissism'' (1997)
* {{cite book | vauthors = Morrison AP |title=Shame: The Underside of Narcissism |date=1989 |publisher=Analytic Press |location=New York |isbn=978-1-317-77161-6}}
* {{cite book | vauthors = Shaw D |title=Maintaining relationships through communication : relational, contextual, and cultural variations |date=2003 |publisher=Lawrence Erlbaum Associates |location=Mahwah, N.J. |isbn=978-0-8058-3990-6}}
* Shaw, Daniel, ''Traumatic Narcissism: Relational Systems of Subjugation'' (2013)
* Thomas David, ''Narcissism: Behind the Mask'' (2010)
* {{cite book | vauthors = Thomas D |title=Narcissism: Behind the Mask |date=2010 |publisher=Book Guild |location=Sussex |isbn=978-1-84624-506-0}}
{{refend}}
{{refend}}

{{Medical condition classification and resources
{{Medical condition classification and resources
| DiseasesDB =
| DiseasesDB =

Revision as of 07:47, 25 March 2023

Narcissistic personality disorder
SpecialtyPsychiatry, Clinical psychology
SymptomsExaggerated feelings of self-importance, excessive craving for admiration, reduced levels of empathy[1][2]
Usual onsetEarly adulthood[2]
DurationLong term[2]
CausesUnknown[3]
Differential diagnosisBipolar Disorder, Antisocial Personality Disorder, Substance Abuse, Borderline Personality Disorder, Histrionic Personality Disorder[1]
TreatmentPsychotherapy, pharmaceuticals for comorbid disorders[1]
Frequency0.5%citations

Narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) is a personality disorder characterized by a life-long pattern of exaggerated feelings of self-importance, an excessive need for admiration, a diminished ability or unwillingness to empathize with others' feelings, and interpersonally exploitative behavior. Narcissistic personality disorder is one of the sub-types of the broader category known as personality disorders.[1][2] It is often comorbid with other mental disorders and associated with significant functional impairment and psychosocial disability.[1]

Personality disorders are a class of mental disorders characterized by enduring and inflexible maladaptive patterns of behavior, cognition, and inner experience, exhibited across many contexts and deviating from those accepted by any culture. These patterns develop by early adulthood, and are associated with significant distress or impairment.[4][5][6] Criteria for diagnosing personality disorders are listed in the sixth chapter of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) and in the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM).

There is no standard treatment for NPD.[7][8] Its high comorbidity with other mental disorders influences treatment choice and outcomes.[7] Psychotherapeutic treatments generally fall into two categories: psychoanalytic/psychodynamic and cognitive behavioral therapy, with growing support for integration of both in therapy.[9][10] However, there is an almost complete lack of studies determining the effectiveness of treatments.[8]

Signs and symptoms

DSM-5

The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5) describes NPD as possessing at least five of the following nine criteria.[2]

  • A grandiose sense of self-importance
  • Preoccupation with fantasies of unlimited success, power, brilliance, beauty, or ideal love
  • Believing that they are "special" and unique and can only be understood by, or should associate with, other special or high-status people (or institutions)
  • Requiring excessive admiration
  • A sense of entitlement (unreasonable expectations of especially favorable treatment or automatic compliance with their expectations)
  • Being interpersonally exploitative (taking advantage of others to achieve their own ends)
  • Lacking empathy (unwilling to recognize or identify with the feelings and needs of others)
  • Often being envious of others or believing that others are envious of them
  • Showing arrogant, haughty behaviors or attitudes

Within the DSM-5, NPD is a cluster B personality disorder.[2] Individuals with cluster B personality disorders often appear dramatic, emotional, or erratic.[2] Narcissistic personality disorder is a mental disorder characterized by a life-long pattern of exaggerated feelings of self-importance, an excessive craving for admiration, and a diminished ability to empathize with others' feelings.[1][2]

A diagnosis of NPD, like other personality disorders, is made by a qualified healthcare professional in a clinical interview. The process of diagnosis often involves asking the client to describe people emotionally close to them, which can reveal extreme arrogance or a lack of empathy.[1]

Narcissistic personality disorder usually develops either in youth or in early adulthood.[2] True symptoms of NPD are pervasive, apparent in varied social situations, and are rigidly consistent over time. Severe symptoms of NPD can significantly impair the person's mental capabilities to develop meaningful human relationships, such as friendship, kinship, and marriage. Generally, the symptoms of NPD also impair the person's psychological abilities to function socially, either at work or at school, or within important societal settings. The DSM-5 indicates that, in order to qualify as symptomatic of NPD, the person's manifested personality traits must substantially differ from social norms.[2]

ICD-11 and ICD-10

In the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, 11th Edition ICD-11 of the World Health Organization (WHO), all personality disorders are diagnosed under a single title called "personality disorder". The criteria for diagnosis are mainly concerned with assessing dysfunction, distress and maladaptive behavior. Once a diagnosis has been made, the clinician then can draw upon five trait domains to describe the particular causes of dysfunction, as these have major implications for potential treatments.[11] NPD, as it currently conceptualised, would correspond more or less entirely to the ICD-11 trait of Dissociality, which includes self-centredness (grandiosity, attention-seeking, entitlement and egocentricity) and lack of empathy (callousness, ruthlessness, manipulativeness, interpersonal exploitativeness, and hostility).[11][12]

In the previous edition, the ICD-10, narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) is listed under the category of "other specific personality disorders", meaning the ICD-10 required that cases otherwise described as NPD in the DSM-5 would only need to meet a general set of diagnostic criteria.[13]

Associated features

People with NPD exaggerate their skills, accomplishments, and their degree of intimacy with people they consider high-status. A sense of personal superiority may lead them to monopolize conversations, look down on others[14] or to become impatient and disdainful when other persons talk about themselves.[2] This behavior correlates to an overall worse functioning in areas of life like work and intimate romantic relationships.[15][16][17][18]

People with NPD have been observed to use psychosocial strategies, such as the tendency to devalue and derogate and to insult and blame other people, usually with anger and hostility towards people's responses to their anti-social behavior.[19] Narcissistic personalities are more likely to respond with anger or aggressiveness when presented with rejection.[20][21][22] Some patients with NPD (see Subtypes) respond to (real or imagined) criticism or defeat with prone to feelings of shame, humiliation, and worthlessness,[14] and usually mask such feelings from people, by feigning humility, responding with outbursts of rage and defiance, or seeking revenge.[2][23]

The DSM-5 indicates that: "Many highly successful individuals display personality traits that might be considered narcissistic. Only when these traits are inflexible, maladaptive, and persisting, and cause significant functional impairment or subjective distress, do they constitute narcissistic personality disorder."[2] Given the high-function sociability associated with narcissism, some people with NPD might not view such a diagnosis as a functional impairment to their lives.[24] Although overconfidence tends to make people with NPD very ambitious, such a mindset does not necessarily lead to professional high achievement and success, because they refuse to take risks, in order to avoid failure or the appearance of failure.[2][23] Moreover, the psychological inability to tolerate disagreement, contradiction, and criticism, makes it difficult for persons with NPD to work cooperatively or to maintain long-term, professional relationships with superiors and colleagues.[25]

Differential diagnosis

The occurrence of narcissistic personality disorder presents a high rate of comorbidity with other mental disorders.[26] People with a fragile variant of NPD (see Subtypes) are prone to bouts of psychological depression, often to the degree that meets the clinical criteria for a co-occurring depressive disorder.[27] NPD is associated with the occurrence of bipolar disorder and substance use disorders,[1][23] especially cocaine use disorder.[2] NPD may also be comorbid or differentiated with the occurrence of other mental disorders, including histrionic personality disorder, borderline personality disorder, antisocial personality disorder, or paranoid personality disorder.[2] NPD should also be differentiated from mania and hypomania as these cases can also present with grandiosity, but present with different levels of functional impairment.[2] It is common for children and adolescents to display personality traits that resemble NPD, but such occurrences are usually transient, and register below the clinical criteria for a formal diagnosis of NPD.[14]

Subtypes

Although the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for NPD has been viewed as homogeneous, there are a variety of subtypes used for classification of NPD.[1][28][29] There is poor consensus on how many subtypes exist, but there is broad acceptance that there are at least two: grandiose or overt narcissism, and vulnerable or covert narcissism.[9][28] However, none of the subtypes of NPD are recognized in the DSM-5 or in the ICD-11.

Empirically-verified subtypes

Some research has indicated the existence of three subtypes of NPD,[30] which can be distinguished by symptom criteria, comorbidity and other clinical criteria. These are as follows:

Grandiose/Malignant: the group exhibits grandiosity, entitlement, interpersonal exploitativeness and manipulation, pursuit of power and control, lack of empathy and remorse, and marked irritability and hostility. This group was noted for high levels of comorbid antisocial and paranoid personality disorders, substance abuse, externalizing, unemployment and greater likelihood of violence.[30][31] Of note, Russ et al. observed that this group "do not appear to suffer from underlying feelings of inadequacy or to be prone to negative affect states other than anger", an observation corroborated by recent research which found this variant to show strong inverse associations with depressive, anxious-avoidant, and dependant/victimised features.[31]

Fragile/Covert: this variant is defined by feelings of shame, envy, resentment, and inferiority (which is occasionally "masked" by arrogance), entitlement, a belief that one is misunderstood or unappreciated, and excessive reactivity to slights or criticism. This variant is associated with elevated levels of psychological distress and comorbid depression, anxiety, and avoidant, borderline and dependent personality disorders.[30][31]

High-Functioning/Exhibitionistic: this variant has been described as "high functioning narcissists [who] were grandiose, competitive, attention-seeking, and sexually provocative; they tended to show adaptive functioning and utilize their narcissistic traits to succeed."[28] This group has been found to have relatively few psychological issues and high rates of obsessive-compulsive personality disorder, with excessive perfectionism posited as a potential cause for their impairment.[30]

Others

Communal Narcissism

A fourth type is the communal narcissist, who shares the same arrogance and self-motives, and sense of entitlement and grandiosity as the grandiose narcissist but seeks power and admiration in the communal realm. They see themselves as altruistic, saintly, caring, helpful, and warm.[32][33]

Millon's Taxonomy

In the study Disorders of Personality: DSM-IV-TM and Beyond (1996), Theodore Millon suggested five subtypes of NPD, although they did not identify specific treatments per subtype.[6]

Subtype Features
Unprincipled Narcissist Deficient conscience; unscrupulous, amoral, disloyal, fraudulent, deceptive, arrogant, exploitive; a con artist and charlatan; dominating, contemptuous, vindictive.
Amorous narcissist Sexually seductive, enticing, beguiling, tantalizing; glib and clever; disinclined to real intimacy; indulges hedonistic desires; bewitches and inveigles others; pathological lying and swindling. Tends to have many affairs, often with exotic partners.
Compensatory narcissist Seeks to counteract or cancel out deep feelings of inferiority and lack of self-esteem; offsets deficits by creating illusions of being superior, exceptional, admirable, noteworthy; self-worth results from self-enhancement.
Elitist narcissist Feels privileged and empowered by virtue of special childhood status and pseudo-achievements; entitled façade bears little relation to reality; seeks favored and good life; is upwardly mobile; cultivates special status and advantages by association.
Normal narcissist Least severe and most interpersonally concerned and empathetic, still entitled and deficient in reciprocity; bold in environments, self-confident, competitive, seeks high targets, feels unique; talent in leadership positions; expecting recognition from others.

Historical demarcation of grandiose and vulnerable types

Over the years, many clinicians and theorists have described two variants of NPD akin to the grandiose and vulnerable expressions of trait narcissism. Some examples include:[34]

Grandiose Phenotype Vulnerable Types
Kohut & Wolf (1978) Mirror-hungry Ideal-hungry
Broucek (1982) Egotistical Dissociative
Rosenfeld (1987) Thick-skinned Thin-skinned
Gabbard (1989, 1998, 2009) Oblivious Hypervigilent
Gersten (1991) Overly grandiose Overly vulnerable
Wink (1992) Willful Hypersensitive
Masterson (1993) Exhibitionist Closet
Fiscalini (1993) Special child Shamed child
Cooper and Maxwell (1995) Empowered Disempowered

Assessment and screening

Narcissistic Personality Inventory

Risk factors for NPD and grandiose/overt and vulnerable/covert subtypes are measured using the narcissistic personality inventory, an assessment tool originally developed in 1979, has undergone multiple iterations with new versions in 1984, 2006 and 2014. It captures principally grandiose narcissism, but also seems to capture elements of vulnerability. A popular three-factor model has it that grandiose narcissism is assessed via the Leadership/Authority and Grandiose/Exhibitionism facets, while a combination of grandiose and vulnerable traits are indexed by the Entitlement/Exploitativeness facet.[35]

Pathological Narcissism Inventory

The Pathological Narcissism Inventory (PNI) was designed to measure fluctuations in grandiose and vulnerable narcissistic states, similar to what is ostensibly observed by some clinicians (though empirical demonstration of this phenomenon is lacking). While having both "grandiosity" and vulnerability scales, empirically both seem to primarily capture vulnerable narcissism. [35][36]

The PNI scales show significant associations with parasuicidal behavior, suicide attempts, homicidal ideation, and several aspects of psychotherapy utilization.[37]

Five-Factor Narcissism Inventory

The Five-Factor Narcissism Inventory (FFNI) was defined as a comprehensive assay of grandiose and vulnerable expressions of trait narcissism. The scale measures 11 traits of grandiose narcissism and 4 traits of vulnerable narcissism, both of which correlate with clinical ratings of NPD (with grandiose features of arrogance, grandiose fantasies, manipulativeness, entitlement and exploitativeness showing stronger relations).[38] Later analysis revealed that the FFNI actually measures three factors:[39]

  1. Agentic Extraversion: an exaggerated sense of self-importance, grandiose fantasies, striving for greatness and acclaim, social dominance and authoritativeness, and exhibitionistic, charming interpersonal conduct.
  2. Self-Centred Antagonism: disdain for others, psychological entitlement, interpersonally exploitative and manipulative behaviour, lack of empathy, anger in response to criticism or rebuke, suspiciousness, and thrill-seeking.
  3. Narcissistic Neuroticism: shame-proneness, oversensitivity and negative emotionality to criticism and rebuke, and excessive need for admiration to maintain self-esteem.

Grandiose narcissism is a combination of agency and antagonism, and vulnerability is a combination of antagonism and neuroticism. The three factors show differential associations with clinically important variables. Agentic traits are associated with high self-esteem, positive view others and the future, autonomous and authentic living, commitment to personal growth, sense of purpose in life and life satisfaction. Neurotic traits show precisely the opposite correlation with all of these variables, while antagonistic traits show more complex associations; they are associated with negative view of others (but necessarily of the self), a sense of alienation from their 'true self', disinterest in personal growth, negative relationships with others, and all forms of aggression.[39][40]

Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory

The Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory (MCMI) is another diagnostic test developed by Theodore Millon. The MCMI includes a scale for narcissism. The NPI and MCMI have been found to be well correlated.[41] Whereas the MCMI measures narcissistic personality disorder (NPD), the NPI measures narcissism as it occurs in the general population; the MCMI is a screening tool. In other words, the NPI measures "normal" narcissism; i.e., most people who score very high on the NPI do not have NPD. Indeed, the NPI does not capture any sort of narcissism taxon as would be expected if it measured NPD.[42]

A 2020 study found that females scored significantly higher on vulnerable narcissism than males, but no gender differences were found for grandiose narcissism.[43]

Causes

Although there are no specific causes for NPD, it is described using the biopsychosocial model which describes a combination of risk factors from biological, psychological and socio-environmental factors.[7][44] This includes but is not limited to genetics, neurobiology, trauma, abuse and parenting.

Genetic

Evidence suggests there is a high heritability of NPD, with a number of genetic influences indicating varying rates of heritability based on subtype.[44][26][45][46] A number of twin studies historically suggested for the heritability of NPD, including personality disorders in general.[47][48][49]

Environment

Environmental and social factors also influence development of NPD.[26] In some people, vulnerable narcissism (or fragile/covert NPD) may develop from an impaired emotional attachment to primary caregivers (usually parents).[50][51] [52]That lack of psychological and emotional attachment to a parental figure can result in the child's perception of themselves as unimportant and unconnected to other people, usually, family, community and society. Typically, the child comes to believe that they have a personality defect that makes them unvalued and unwanted.[53][54] While very little is known about the origins of grandiose narcissism (or its concomitant subtypes of NPD), there it is often suggested that overindulgent, permissive parenting or insensitive and over-controlling parenting are risk factors towards the development of NPD in a child.[14][27]

In Gabbard's Treatments of Psychiatric Disorders (2014), the following factors are identified as promoting the development of narcissistic personality disorder:[55]

  • An oversensitive temperament (individual differences of behavior) at birth[56]
  • Excessive admiration that is never balanced with realistic criticism
  • Excessive praise for good behaviors, or excessive criticism for bad behaviors in childhood
  • Overindulgence and overvaluation by family or peers
  • Being praised by adults for perceived exceptional physical appearance or abilities
  • Trauma caused by psychological abuse, physical abuse or sexual abuse in childhood
  • Unpredictable or unreliable parental caregiving
  • Learning the behaviors of psychological manipulation from parents or peers[57]

Moreover, the research reported in "Modernity and Narcissistic Personality Disorders" (2014) indicates that cultural elements also influence the prevalence of NPD, because narcissistic personality traits more commonly occur in modern societies than in traditionalist conservative societies.[26]

Pathophysiology

Studies of the occurrence of narcissistic personality disorder identified structural abnormalities in the brains of people with NPD, specifically, a lesser volume of gray matter in the left, anterior insular cortex.[58][59] The results of a 2015 study associated the condition of NPD with a reduced volume of gray matter in the prefrontal cortex.[60] The regions of the brain identified and studied – the insular cortex and the prefrontal cortex – are associated with the human emotions of empathy and compassion, and with the mental functions of cognition and emotional regulation. The neurologic findings of the studies suggest that NPD may be related to a compromised (damaged) capacity for emotional empathy and emotional regulation.[61]

Management

Treatment for NPD is primarily psychotherapeutic; there is no clear evidence that psychopharmacological treatment is effective for NPD, although it can prove useful for treating comorbid disorders.[9][62] Psychotherapeutic treatment falls into two general categories: psychoanalytic/psychodynamic and cognitive behavioral. Psychoanalytic therapies include schema therapy, transference focused psychotherapy, mentalization-based treatment and metacognitive psychotherapy. Cognitive behavioral therapies include cognitive behavioral therapy and dialectical behavior therapy. Formats also include group therapy and couples therapy.[10] The specific choice of treatment varies based on individual presentations.[63]

Management of narcissistic personality disorder has not been well studied, however many treatments tailored to NPD exist.[8][1] Therapy is complicated by the lack of treatment-seeking behavior in people with NPD, despite mental distress. Additionally, people with narcissistic personality disorders have decreased life satisfaction and lower qualities of life, irrespective of diagnosis.[64][65][66][67][68] People with NPD often present with comorbid mental disorders, complicating diagnosis and treatment.[1] NPD is rarely the primary reason for which people seek mental health treatment. When people with NPD enter treatment (psychologic or psychiatric), they often express seeking relief from a comorbid mental disorder, including major depressive disorder, a substance use disorder (drug addiction), or bipolar disorder.[23]

Prognosis

As of 2020, no treatment guidelines exist for NPD and no empirical studies have been conducted on specific NPD groups to determine efficacy for psychotherapies and pharmacology.[8][9]

The presence of NPD in patients undergoing psychotherapy for the treatment of other mental disorders is associated with slower treatment progress and higher dropout rates.[1]

Epidemiology

As of 2018, overall prevalence is estimated to range from 0.8% to 6.2%.[69][70] In 2008 under the DSM-IV, lifetime prevalence of NPD was estimated to be 6.2%, with 7.7% for men and 4.8% for women,[71] with a 2015 study confirming the gender difference.[72] In clinical settings, prevalence estimates range from 1% to 15%.[7][3] The occurrence of narcissistic personality disorder presents a high rate of comorbidity with other mental disorders.[26]

History

The term "narcissism" comes from a first century (written in the year 8 AD) book by the Roman poet Ovid. Metamorphoses Book III is a myth about two main characters, Narcissus and Echo. Narcissus is a handsome young man who spurns the advances of many potential lovers. When Narcissus rejects the nymph Echo, named this way because she was cursed to only echo the sounds that others made, the gods punish him by making him fall in love with his own reflection in a pool of water. When Narcissus discovers that the object of his love cannot love him back, he slowly pines away and dies.[73]

The concept of excessive selfishness has been recognized throughout history. In ancient Greece, the concept was understood as hubris. It is only since the late 1800s that narcissism has been defined in psychological terms:[74]

  • Havelock Ellis (1898) was the first psychologist to use the term when he linked the myth to the condition in one of his patients.[74]
  • Sigmund Freud (1905-1953) used the terms "narcissistic libido" in his Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality.[75][74]
  • Ernest Jones (1913/1951) was the first to construe extreme narcissism as a character flaw.
  • Robert Waelder (1925) published the first case study of narcissism. His patient was a successful scientist with an attitude of superiority, an obsession with fostering self-respect, and a lack of normal feelings of guilt. The patient was aloof and independent from others and had an inability to empathize with others situations, and was selfish sexually. Waelder's patient was also overly logical and analytical and valued abstract intellectual thought (thinking for thinking's sake) over the practical application of scientific knowledge.

Narcissistic personality was first described by the psychoanalyst Robert Waelder in 1925.[76] The term narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) was coined by Heinz Kohut in 1968.[77][78] Waelder's initial study has been influential in the way narcissism and the clinical disorder Narcissistic personality disorder are defined today[79]

Freudianism and psychoanalysis

Much early history of narcissism and NPD originates from psychoanalysis. Regarding the adult neurotic's sense of omnipotence, Sigmund Freud said that "this belief is a frank acknowledgement of a relic of the old megalomania of infancy";[80] and concluded that: "we can detect an element of megalomania in most other forms of paranoic disorder. We are justified in assuming that this megalomania is essentially of an infantile nature, and that, as development proceeds, it is sacrificed to social considerations."[81]

Narcissistic injury and narcissistic scar are terms used by Freud in the 1920s. Narcissistic wound and narcissistic blow are other, almost interchangeable, terms.[82] When wounded in the ego, either by a real or a perceived criticism, a narcissistic person's displays of anger can be disproportionate to the nature of the criticism suffered;[14] but typically, the actions and responses of the NPD person are deliberate and calculated.[2] Despite occasional flare-ups of personal insecurity, the inflated self-concept of the NPD person is primarily stable.[2]

In The Psychology of Gambling (1957), Edmund Bergler considered megalomania to be a normal occurrence in the psychology of a child,[83] a condition later reactivated in adult life, if the individual takes up gambling.[84] In The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis (1946), Otto Fenichel said that people who, in their later lives, respond with denial to their own narcissistic injury usually undergo a similar regression to the megalomania of childhood.[85]

Narcissistic supply

Narcissistic supply was a concept introduced by Otto Fenichel in 1938, to describe a type of admiration, interpersonal support, or sustenance drawn by an individual from his or her environment and essential to their self-esteem.[86] The term is typically used in a negative sense, describing a pathological or excessive need for attention or admiration that does not take into account the feelings, opinions, or preferences of other people.[87]

Narcissistic rage

The term narcissistic rage was a concept introduced by Heinz Kohut in 1972. Narcissistic rage was theorised as a reaction to a perceived threat to a narcissist's self-esteem or self-worth. Narcissistic rage occurs on a continuum from aloofness, to expressions of mild irritation or annoyance, to serious outbursts, including violent attacks.[88]

Narcissistic rage reactions are not necessarily limited to narcissistic personality disorder. They may also be seen in catatonic, paranoid delusion, and depressive episodes.[88] It was later suggested that narcissistic people have two layers of rage; the first layer of rage being directed constant anger towards someone else, with the second layer being self-deprecating.[89]

Object relations

In the second half of the 20th century, in contrast to Freud's perspective of megalomania as an obstacle to psychoanalysis, in the US and UK Kleinian psychologists used the object relations theory to re-evaluate megalomania as a defence mechanism.[90] This Kleinian therapeutic approach built upon Heinz Kohut's view of narcissistic megalomania as an aspect of normal mental development, by contrast with Otto Kernberg's consideration of such grandiosity as a pathological distortion of normal psychological development.[91]

To the extent that people are pathologically narcissistic, the person with NPD can be a self-absorbed individual who passes blame by psychological projection and is intolerant of contradictory views and opinions; is apathetic towards the emotional, mental, and psychological needs of other people; and is indifferent to the negative effects of their behaviors, whilst insisting that people should see them as an ideal person.[citation needed] The merging of the terms "inflated self-concept" and "actual self" is evident in later research on the grandiosity component of narcissistic personality disorder, along with incorporating the defence mechanisms of idealization and devaluation and of denial.[92]

Comparison to other personality disorders

NPD shares properties with borderline personality disorder, including social stigma, unclear causes and prevalence rates. In a 2020 study, it was argued that NPD is following a similar historical trend to borderline personality disorder: "In the past three decades, enormous progress has been made to elucidate the psychopathology, longitudinal course, and effective treatment for BPD. NPD, which remains as similarly stigmatized and poorly understood as BPD once was, now carries the potential for a new wave of investigation and treatment development."[93]

However, NPD also shares some commonality with the now discredited "multiple personality disorder" (MPD) personality constellation in popular culture and clinical lore. MPD received a high level of mainstream media attention the 1980s, followed by a nearly complete removal from public discourse within the following two decades; this was in part due to thorough debunking many of its propositions and the evident societal harm created by its entry into the legal defence realm. Similar to MPD, NPD has been the subject of high levels of preoccupation in social and popular media forums, without a firm empirical basis despite over a century of description in clinical lore. The NPD label may be misused colloquially and clinically to disparage a target for the purpose of buttressing one's own self-esteem, or other motives that are detrimental for the person receiving the label. Finally, the rise in popular interest in NPD is not accompanied by hypothesized increases in narcissism among recent generations despite widespread assumptions to the contrary.[94]

Controversy

The extent of controversy about narcissism was on display when the committee on personality disorders for the 5th Edition (2013) of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders recommended the removal of Narcissistic Personality from the manual. A contentious three-year debate unfolded in the clinical community with one of the sharpest critics being John Gunderson, who led the DSM personality disorders committee for the 4th edition of the manual.[95]

The American Psychiatric Association's (APA) formulation, description, and definition of narcissistic personality disorder, as published in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Ed., Text Revision (DSM-IV-TR, 2000), was criticised by clinicians as inadequately describing the range and complexity of the personality disorder that is NPD. That it is excessively focused upon "the narcissistic individual's external, symptomatic, or social interpersonal patterns – at the expense of ... internal complexity and individual suffering", which reduced the clinical utility of the NPD definition in the DSM-IV-TR.[24]

In revising the diagnostic criteria for personality disorders, the work group for the list of "Personality and Personality Disorders" proposed the elimination of narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) as a distinct entry in the DSM-5, and thus replaced a categorical approach to NPD with a dimensional approach, which is based upon the severity of the dysfunctional-personality-trait domains.[96][97] Clinicians critical of the DSM-5 revision characterized the new diagnostic system as an "unwieldy conglomeration of disparate models that cannot happily coexist", which is of limited usefulness in clinical practice.[98] Despite the reintroduction of the NPD entry, the APA's re-formulation, re-description, and re-definition of NPD, towards a dimensional view based upon personality traits, remains in the list of personality disorders of the DSM-5.

A 2011 study concluded that narcissism should be conceived as personality dimensions pertinent to the full range of personality disorders, rather than as a distinct diagnostic category.[99] In a 2012 literature review about NPD, the researchers concluded that narcissistic personality disorder "shows nosological inconsistency, and that its consideration as a trait domain needed further research would be strongly beneficial to the field."[100] In a 2018 latent structure analysis, results suggested that the DSM-5 NPD criteria fail to distinguish some aspects of narcissism relevant to diagnosis of NPD and subclinical narcissism.[101]

In popular culture

  • Suzanne Stone-Maretto, Nicole Kidman's character in the film To Die For (1995), wants to appear on television at all costs, even if this involves murdering her husband. A psychiatric assessment of her character noted that she "was seen as a prototypical narcissistic person by the raters: on average, she satisfied 8 of 9 criteria for narcissistic personality disorder... had she been evaluated for personality disorders, she would receive a diagnosis of narcissistic personality disorder".[102]
  • Jay Gatsby, the eponymous character of F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby (1925), "an archetype of self-made American men seeking to join high society", has been described as a "pathological narcissist" for whom the "ego-ideal" has become "inflated and destructive" and whose "grandiose lies, poor sense of reality, sense of entitlement, and exploitive treatment of others" conspire toward his own demise.[103]

See also

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Further reading

  • Lowen A (1997). Narcissism : denial of the true self. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-5543-1.
  • Malkin C (2015). Rethinking narcissism: the bad-and surprising good-about feeling special. New York, NY: Harper Wave. ISBN 978-0-06-234810-4.
  • Masterson JF (1981). The Narcissistic and Borderline Disorders: An Integrated Developmental Approach. London: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9780203776148. ISBN 978-0876302927. LCCN 81038540.
  • Morrison AP (1986). Essential papers on narcissism. Essential Papers in Psychoanalysis. Vol. 13. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-5395-8.
  • Morrison AP (1989). Shame: The Underside of Narcissism. New York: Analytic Press. ISBN 978-1-317-77161-6.
  • Shaw D (2003). Maintaining relationships through communication : relational, contextual, and cultural variations. Mahwah, N.J.: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. ISBN 978-0-8058-3990-6.
  • Thomas D (2010). Narcissism: Behind the Mask. Sussex: Book Guild. ISBN 978-1-84624-506-0.