What are the manifestations of Performing Personality Disorder

The clinical manifestations of Performing Personality Disorder mainly include abnormal behavior, shallow and diffuse cognitive style, abnormal emotion and feeling, abnormal interpersonal relationship, and high self-evaluation.
1. Behavioral abnormalities: Performative personality disorder often shows self-dramatization, pretentiousness, exaggeration and other actions in daily behaviors. Facial expression is rich but overly pretentious.
2. Shallow and diffuse cognitive style: The patient’s cognition of daily things is shallow and diffuse, and is easily influenced by others or the environment.
3. Abnormal emotions: The patient’s emotions are easily reactive and changeable, and he/she is easily agitated and emotional.
4. Abnormal interpersonal relationships: the patient has superficial feelings towards people and finds it difficult to maintain long-lasting social ties with the surrounding.
5. Excessive self-evaluation: these patients have excessive self-evaluation, conceited, often self-centered, self-indulgent, and often do whatever it takes to meet their needs.
The patient needs to go to the hospital in time to avoid the delay of the disease.