Paranoid Personality Disorder belongs to a group of conditions commonly known as a “cluster A" and involves eccentric and odd ways of thinking(Vyas & Khan, 2016). In addition, people with PPD tend to suffer suspicion and unrelenting mistrust even when there is no substantial reason for the suspicion. The disorder begins in early adulthood and tends to be common in men as opposed to women. DSM-5 Criteria for Paranoid Personality Disorder entails a pervasive distrust and suspiciousness of others in which their motives are interpreted as malevolent the present in various contexts in early adulthood (Paris, 2015). On suspect without a basis and tend to be preoccupied with unjustified doubts. The patient is always reluctant to confide in others. Such patients read hidden demeaning or threatening meanings from events and often have persistent grudges that graduates to perceived attacks on their character or reputations(Vyas & Khan, 2016). Such hidden items as dominated by recurrent suspicions without justifications, especially when it comes to fidelity and sexual partners. It is important to note that such does not occur exclusively in the course of bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, a depressive disorder with psychotic or any other psychotic disorder or even related to physiological effects of another medical condition.
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